6/30/2011

Apple's Fifth-Generation iPhone to Begin Assembly in “Mid to Late August”

According to Katy Huberty, an analyst with brokerage firm Morgan Stanley, Apple's manufacturing partners will begin assembling the next generation of iPhone handsets in August, ahead of a projected launch late in the third calendar quarter, which ends September 30.


After attending meetings with unnamed sources in Taiwan, Huberty issued a note to her clients stating that “Apple's next iPhone will begin production in mid-to-late August and ramp aggressively”, indicating that the iPhone 4S (or iPhone 5, as the handset is yet unnamed) will be ready to ship for launch in September. Huberty confirmed this timeline, stating that according to her sources the handset will launch to consumers “sometime near the end of the third calendar quarter of the year”.

Rumors have swirled for months around the release date for the next iPhone, and most have pointed to the handset getting out the door sometime in September. As a result of this launch being later than Morgan Stanley had originally advised, Huberty moved the expected sales of 2 million iPhone handsets from third quarter estimates to the fourth quarter while keeping expected annual sales firm at 72 million iPhones. Of course, the analyst stated that if she were incorrect and the next iPhone was to launch earlier in September, it would simply drive “upside” to these estimates.

Also in the report were suggestions that an Apple-branded television was being developed, as is an iPhone that is intended for lower-priced and prepaid markets. “We also believe Apple is in the early design stages for a TV, which could add $19 billion and $4.50 of annual revenue and EPS longer-term,” Huberty states, updating her March 2011 report that some of her intelligence checking in Asia had suggested that Apple was developing a “Smart TV prototype” of some sort. This is on top of speculation that has been circulating throughout the past couple of weeks that Apple has been developing a television that runs its mobile iOS software, apparently leaked by an ex-Apple executive.

In regards a cheaper iPhone, the report stated that Apple is expecting to see a huge increase to iPhone sales figures in 2012 thanks to “new products and potentially lower price points.” It's no secret that Apple has been working on ways to improve their market segmentation, and could easily make an updated iPhone 4 model their new prepaid or value option if the iPhone 5 is another industry leader.

With increased iPhone production, rumors of TVs and a holiday season fast approaching, it would be amiss to neglect mentioning the iPad as well. Morgan Stanley states that they see iPad shipments resuming to full steam, now that the supply problems associated with the Japan earthquake earlier this year have been mostly solved. Earlier this month a report surfaced indicating that Apple was demanding a price cut of somewhere around ten percent from its iPad parts suppliers as their orders increase, which Huberty echoed could “boost margins modestly in the June quarter and more in the September quarter”.



While Apple's stock price has been sagging of late, dropping more than six percent throughout June, Morgan Stanley sees this as an opportunity to get in while the price is low. The brokerage kept its Overweight rating for AAPL, targeting a stock price of $428, which is more than $100 per share higher than the price today. If these rumors end up being true, Apple very well might see its stock increasing throughout the remainder of the year.

6/26/2011

Nikon D7000

Features and Design


The Nikon D7000 doesn’t look radically different than many other mid-range, all-black DSLRs on the market, such as the 18-megapixel Canon EOS 60D ($999 body only). With the 18-105mm kit lens, the Nikon has a no-nonsense vibe that says “I’m a serious camera.” Don’t even think of casually carrying it around. The D7000 measures 5.2 x 4.1 x 3 (WHD, in inches) and weighs 1.5 pounds without a battery, card or lens. Hefty and serious indeed.

Looking closely at the D7000, you get an inkling of its capabilities, but nothing that quite gives away its position as the hottest DSLR on the market. It has the usual Nikon red accent on the grip and a few judiciously-placed logos and icons. Drill down a bit and some of the finer points appear, such as a second LCD readout on the top, and a 3-inch 921K-pixel LCD on the rear. But the real enhancements are internal, as we’ll soon see.

Like any DSLR, the key feature on the front of the D7000 is the lens mount. In this case, it’s a Nikon F bayonet-type, and all functions are possible with AF Nikkor glass. As always, you can spend a small fortune on lenses, but the 5.8x kit lens (18-105mm, 27-157.5mm 35mm equivalent) with built-in Vibration Reduction is a good start. Also up front are an AF Assist lamp and buttons for Function, depth-of-field preview and lens release. There’s a three-pinhole mono mic, so if you want stereo sound for your videos, get ready to spend some extra cash on an aftermarket mic. You can connect one with the handy mic input in one of the side compartments. The pistol grip is solid, and there’s a jog wheel right below the shutter button and power switch.

On the top is the main mode dial, which sits on a perplexing control called a Release-Mode Dial. With it, you change your frame rate (most commonly) such as single frame, continuous low speed (1 to 5 fps) or continuous high speed (6 fps). Access to this dial is good, but in order to turn it, you have to press a nearby locking button at the same time. This seems very convoluted for such a basic and important control. In contrast, Canon cameras have a drive button you simply press to make this adjustment. That said, after some initial fumbling, we made adjustments using the left index and middle fingers. The same dial also gives you access to the self-timer, quiet shutter release option, using a remote control and “Mup” for Mirror up. The main mode dial has the usual options: Auto, Auto flash off, Program AE, Shutter- and Aperture-Priority as well as full Manual. Scene is typical as you can choose specific shooting situations (portrait, landscape and so on, 19 options total). There are also two settings (U1, U2) to save your favorite configurations.

Next to the stacked dials are the flash, hot shoe and control panel LCD, one of the key features separating entry-levels DSLRs from “enthusiast” models (500 clams more is another huge point of difference, but that’s another story). This readout lets you check your settings without having to put the camera in front of your face, and is very handy for shooting on the fly. Next to the shutter are buttons to change metering type and exposure compensation.

Nikon D7000



The rear has a very good and bright viewfinder with 100-percent field of view and 0.95x magnification (by comparison, the Canon EOS 60D is 96-percent coverage with 0.95x magnification). A diopter control lets you fine-tune it for your eyesight. Below the VF is very good LCD screen rated 921K pixels. The 60D has an articulating 3-inch screen with more dots (1.04 million total), so Canon wins that round.

Surrounding the screen are the usual array of buttons for white balance, ISO and so on, with another jog wheel on the top right to move through menu options and a controller with center OK button. Since this is 2011, there’s a red video dot in middle of the Live View lever—simply pull it to the right, the mirror raises up, press the dot and you can shoot HD video (1920 x 1080 at 24 fps MOV files). There’s a six-pinhole speaker nearby. This is hardly the 1080p at 60 fps of the recently reviewed Panasonic SDT750, but it’s home video nonetheless (more in the performance section).

On the right side is a compartment for two SDHC/SDXC cards. You can put stills on one, video the other if that rings your bell, or just use a single card. The D7000 is the first camera we’re aware of that uses the Ultra High Speed system (UHS-1) for faster read and write speeds. The left side has a compartment with A/V, USB and mini-HDMI outs. A second has inputs for mics and GPS. Near the lens mount is an AF/Manual switch, as well as bracket and flash-open keys.

The bottom of this Made-In-Thailand DSLR has the battery compartment, metal tripod mount, and the contact cover for an optional battery pack. As with lenses, you can spend thousands if you want to trick out your camera. Hold off for a while, since the D7000 is far from cheap to begin with.

What's in the Box
The D7000 includes kit includes both the body and 18-105mm VR lens, if you decide on that option. You’ll also get EN-EL15 rechargeable Li-ion battery rated up to 850 shots per CIPA, charger, eyepiece cap, rubber eyecup, USB and A/V cables, strap, LCD monitor cover, body cap, accessory shoe cover and ViewNX 2 software on CD-ROM. For good measure, Nikon includes a 328-page user’s manual for light reading.

Since this camera is one of the first that’s UHS-1 compatible, which allows for up to 45 Mbps read speeds, we popped in a new 16GB SanDisk Extreme Pro SDHC card and hit the streets.


Performance and Use


The Nikon D7000 uses a 16.2-megapixel APS-C size sensor (23.6 x 15.8mm), a first for the company. Its most expensive DSLRs feature full-frame imagers (23.6 x 36mm) but expect to pay at least $2,500 for one. While not the 18-megapixels of the APS-C 60D, at these levels you’d be hard pressed to notice the difference, unless you’re blowing up your images to fill a Times Square billboard. Both are overkill for most shutterbugs, but if there’s no compromise with image quality at these high numbers, what’s the harm? Note there is definitely harm with many 14- and 16-megapixel point-and-shoots with their tiny CCDs — that’s why we suggest avoiding nose-bleed figures in that category.

Nikon D7000

At 16.2MP, you’re capturing 4928 x 3264 pixel files. We put the camera into RAW+JPEG Fine mode to test its ability to push piles of pixels. As usual, we started in Auto, then moved to manual options since it’s a shame not to play with a camera of this level. Videos were shot at the highest resolution.

When we were first shown the D7000, Nikon execs were really stoked describing the new 2,016-pixel RGB 3D Color Matrix metering system. They claimed it would deliver incredibly accurate exposures. They noted the $8,000 D3x uses the “old” 1,005-pixel 3D Color Matrix Metering II setup. This—along with the new sensor—are among the key advances of this DSLR, as is the speedier burst mode of 6 fps versus the 4.5 of the 12.3-megapixel D90. The Nikon D3s is Nikon’s fastest camera, at 9 fps, but it costs $5,199 (body only). Another advance is increased ISO sensitivity. Native is 100 to 6400, but it hits 25,600 in the Hi 2 setting, for shooting in near darkness. Toss in a new 39-point AF system with nine center cross-type sensors, and you’ve got one impressive DSLR in your hands. Now it was time to see if all the pieces in the puzzle came together.

It’s dead of winter in the Northeast, and it’s hard to find anything moving quickly to test the burst mode in our neck of the woods. Not so in Manhattan, where yellow cabs and red buses fly by along with silver-clad messengers on scooters. We used Continuous H to capture them.

Before getting to the results, let’s state that using the Nikon D7000 is quite enjoyable. Response time is blazing fast even shooting RAW+JPEG Fine; peeling off bursts of 10 to 20 images, the camera barely seemed to breathe hard. Once we got the feel of this beefy DSLR, changing parameters was quite simple, even that odd Release Mode dial.


After filling our SanDisk card, we made prints, reviewed the files closely on a monitor and watched the videos on a 50-inch plasma HDTV via HDMI. Nikon claims with the expanded ISO range you can “capture just about every moment that captures you.” Well, we had to try shooting a single candle in a very dark room at 25,600 ISO — the results were predictable as we had a pixilated mess. Oh, you can clean up the noise in the RAW files, but the JPEGs were pretty bad. You need a full-frame sensor, and to spend twice the money, for solid results at those levels. That on the table, the D7000 handles noise unbelievably well up to ISO 3200, with noise making its presence felt at 6400. At 10,000 the snowstorm turns into a blizzard, but if you stay within the native range of 100 to 6400, you’ll be quite happy.

Colors, as you’d expect, were very accurate. Although we tend to like ours more saturated and vivid, you can tweak the D7000 to whatever level suits you, as Nikon has a suite of retouching options available during playback. We’re talking fine-tuning here, as the basic photos are much better than acceptable. The new metering mode handled some difficult in-and-out of shadow subjects but it’s not perfect — you still need your fill flash and exposure compensation skills for best results. Focusing was super sharp, and very fast, with terrific detail.

We had no trouble capturing fast-moving vehicles flying down Manhattan streets with hardly any blur. This will be a great camera for parents with budding athletes, or if you have a hyper-energetic kid (aren’t they all?).

We can go on and on about the D7000’s still capabilities, but you get the idea, it’s a very fine DSLR. It is not, however, a very fine camcorder.

Our issues with contrast-phase-detection focusing systems remain on the table. Nikon’s AF system works OK, and colors are spot on, but when you touch any of the controls, such as pressing the shutter or working the zoom, the mic picks it up, something no camcorder does. Sony’s SLT-series DSLRs with phase-detect focusing still remain the video leaders, as far as DSLRs are concerned.

Nikon D7000

Conclusion
Having extensively tested the Nikon D7000 , it’s easy to understand why this camera ranks up there in popularity, even with a $1,200 price tag. Simply put, if you’re serious about photography, you want this camera. As for the video, it’s a nice feature, but not the raison d’ĂȘtre for this very impressive DSLR. Good luck finding one—or getting a deal.





Highs:

• 16.2MP APS-C DSLR
• Terrific photos
• Very responsive (6 fps)
• Top ISO of 25,600
• Fast focusing, excellent detail

Lows:

• Hard to find and forget about a price break
• Weird Release-Mode dial
• Heavy noise above ISO 10,000—which is pretty amazing anyway
• HD video still problematic

Nikon D7000 Specifications

Type: Single-lens reflex digital camera

Lens mount: Nikon F mount (with AF coupling and AF contacts)

Effective pixels: 16.2 million

Image sensor: 23.6 x 15.6 mm CMOS sensor

Image size (pixels) - 4,928 x 3,262 [L]
- 3,696 x 2,448 [M]
- 2,464 x 1,632 [S]

File format: 1) NEF(RAW), 2)JPEG, 3)NEF(RAW)+JPEG

Media SD: (Secure Digital) memory cards *1, SDHC and SDXC compliant

Frame advance rate: CL:1 to 5frames fps*
CH:6 fps *
*CIPA guidelines
ISO sensitivity ISO 100 to 6400, can be set up to approx. 2 EV (ISO 25600 equivalent) above ISO 6400; auto ISO sensitivity control available

Movie: Frame size (pixels) and frame rate:
[NTSC] 1,920 x 1,080; 24p - 1,280 x 720; 30p - 1,280 x 720; 24p - 640 x 424; 30p [PAL] 1,920 x 1,080; 24p - 1,280 x 720;25p - 1,280 x 720;24p - 640 x 424; 25p
Maximum Recording Time:Approx.20 min.
File format/Video compression: MOV, H.264/MPEG-4 Advanced Video Cording
Audio recording device; Built-in monaural or external stereo microphone

Monitor: 3-in., approx. 921k-dot, TFT LCD with brightness adjustment

Power source: Battery; One rechargeable Li-ion battery EN-EL15
AC adapter(optional);EH-5a AC adapter; requires EP-5B power connector

Dimensions (approx.): (W x H x D) 132 X 105 X 77mm

Weight (approx.): 690g without battery, memory card, or body cap, 780g;with battery and memory card but without body cap

Major supplied accessories: Rechargeable Li-ion battery EN-EL15, Battery charger MH-25, Camera strap AN-DC1, USB cable, Audio video cable,ViewNX 2 CD-ROM

6/25/2011

The Samsung UN40C6000


Samsung un40c6000
Samsung UN40D6000 LCD TV 40 inches for most of the new technology. Do not miss out on if you have a lot of technology. The options are to change to the TV, and a very good investment

If you are like many people in Britain, you already have online stores to look for opportunities. Just like the television and confusing menu options and specifications. Maybe you can really dizzy, but do not let your guide price only drawback. Consider the space that the whole room, and television entertainment, which is to serve.

Some of the functions of the brain controls the meta-Active Vision, Vista will automatically resolution and Dolby. Active vision quickly adapts itself to every image as a way of blurring of fast-paced action sequences to be reduced.

While television can be a cost, you can register with the ecological aspects. Samsung UN40C6000 is equipped with light sensors that many TVs are now, it controls the TV light, depending on ambient light. How we use energy is needed and saves the environment and their light bill.

They look really special and fun in this model is that the 100Hz Active Vision M100 HD Pro engine (owned by Samsung) for sharp images that are wrong sure, even if the computer shows the film as an actor. The colors are quite spectacular, is the contrast at the same time high. No doubt there are also a feature called Resolution +, something no other manufacturer offers a system with low cost.

If you enjoy playing video games, this TV is not bad. In fact, this is an environment for the players. Here you find the right plug-ins to ensure you can use the games console to play without any hassle. There is also a plug-in that you are connected to your laptop or your laptop or PC, so you can use a TV monitor.

For those who really like to buy a television 40 inches, so it is a good model to buy. Here are some problems with sound quality, but in reality it is difficult, but beyond that, this is a good option. If you have a voice that not even an issue.

Samsung UN40D6000 200 Hz refresh rate, it is currently not available. This ratio shows that more than 200 images can be shown on TV almost every other, non-standard TV streams, which contains 50 photos. Samsung double frame and a black box in the middle of each picture .

Top mobile phones

Mobile World in the hair tends to be a long summer, after the endless ads for the Mobile World Congress, and the competition for the best mobile phones quickly in the coming months. But that does not mean that there are many amazing new facilities will be published this year. Here are our top 10 is now expected.

1.Phone 4S/5

iPhone 5 placeholder

Apple fans show confidence in September when the Cupertino company usually shows its line of iPods. A new generation of mobile WWDC is missing, the sounds are still common, what is expected. Four-inch screen? NFC? Eight-megapixel camera? All are reliable.
What is the name that you wait for the Apple iPhone is seen called 4S 2012 a major reform.


2 HTC Sensation
HTC Sensation

Feeling began when a severe beating after the publication of several months. With an impressive 4.3-inch display, the speed of light first 2 GHz processor and video in 1080, promises on the phone to beat in 2011.
The only question is, can we work for future versions of the HTC Android.



3 HP Pre 3
HP Pre 3

The third version of the active before the sale, however small, is almost there, will be published in early July. HP will provide the device back in February, which, like its predecessor, but an upgrade of the interior. This is a very fast 1.4-GHz processor, a five-megapixel WebOS excellent under the hood.




4 HP Veer
HP Veer

HP Veer his debut in these shores since been published in America last month. The smartphone uses a small WebOS ", prior to the 3, but is somewhat slower than the Qualcomm Snapdragon processor, 8 GB and is only 54.5x84x15.1mm.





5 Google Nexus 3
Just a rumor, but it can become a reality in the city. Perhaps Google's Android phone will be sandwiches, ice cream, the video playback and video recording Full HD 1080p display. It is not a word that makes the unit of Google, even if the LG was discussed.

6 Motorola Milestone 3
motorola milestone 3

Apparently not in the UK, but Step 3 is officially released. It is four inches and a large QWERTY keyboard with five rows, which has the advantages of the figures are much simpler than previous versions. It is a dual-core processor and is equipped with the Android 2.3.




7 Motorola Pro
motorola pro


U.S. English version of the Droid Pro comes next month. It has a full QWERTY keyboard on the kinds of things, a five-megapixel and 8 GB. But Android is only 2.2, which means that she is the most advanced smartphones in Google deficiency.




8 BlackBerry Bold 9900
BlackBerry Bold 9900


Three strikes in August 9900 BlackBerry Bold is the latest company to recover some lost positions in professional mode. His faithful keyboard, 1.2-GHz processor and the ultra-slim body 10.5 mm, which is a fan of e-mail throughout his promise.




9 Windows Mobile Nokia W8

nokia windows phone 7 2

One of the two Windows Mobile Nokia expects by the end of the year. He said that the N8 to emulate the hardware, aluminum finish, and 12 megapixels. Mango Windows Mobile comes on board the aircraft, which is a life or death of Nokia.




10 Windows Mobile Nokia W7
Rolling Eldar Murtazin, this is the first Windows version of Nokia. Attractive design, inspired by the Nokia X7 8-megapixel camera and Qualcomm chips .

6/23/2011

canon T3i

canon T3i DSLR is the perfect digital camera, the photographer nor the competition. It is a compact to operate, simple and offers an optimum performance at any time. This electronic device is a dynamic ideal time again. Besides all the functions with which to use manual functions, the photographers set the shock to their needs.



This model offers the latest technology solutions for real lenses. This great pictures as simple as point and shoot. This goal provides a clear picture and clarity of each image. These include expansions and contractions to achieve a perfect balance in the second half.

Canon Rebel T3i, DIGIC 4 is the latest 18-megapixel CMOS sensor that allows for full HD (1080p), video-installations. This means that the video footage and pictures of fast action, and fast, with perfect clarity. Beautiful colors and the display can be achieved by each shot.

In addition, new visualization features, making it much easier to make, films. The options are wide and low range of diversity. It is also to glare, which has certainly reduce its benefits. It was never easier to detect and investigate the transparency and quality immediately.

canon T3i has a system that allows developed a new way, and when circumstances require it. It includes the integration of dynamic scenes, which comes to all, and the light effect. You do not have to worry about lighting and how the shot comes.

Current technologies such as wireless flash control, it is important in this model, and can make life much easier in the dark. Rebel T3i in all lighting conditions and automatically adjusts the settings for your account. Quickly, easily and simply seems the most important feature of this device.

T3i Canon Rebel is ideal for professional photographers and beginners. Compact and lightweight, great shots all the time. It has many features that surprised the guests, why they were fighting for the old models for a long time. It is also very easily accessible and available in a variety of vendors. It showed an absolute joy to use from the start .

HTC Evo

The HTC Evo View is a 7-inch, 4G internet tablet from HTC running Android 3.0 (Honeycomb). It has a 1.5GHz Qualcomm Snapdragon processor, 1GB of RAM, 32 GB of internal memory, a microSD slot, dual cameras (a 1.3-megapixels front-facing camera and a 5-megapixels rear facing camera). htc-evo-view-reviewThe display's resolution is 1024-by-600 pixels; and, it supports pen input using HTC's Scribe pen. The digital pen accessory comes with the tablet, and lets you capture notations digitally--for example, highlight a passage or sign a document--and on audio.
  The HTC Evo View has dimensions of 196 x 112 x 13 mm and weighs at 15 ounces (about 0.9 pounds). The display on the Evo View is an LCD capacitive touchscreen. Input features found in HTC Evo View 4G are accelerometer sensor for UI auto-rotate, HTC Sense UI, multi-touch input method, handwriting support, touch-sensitive controls with rotating icons and proximity sensor for auto turn-off.
  The HTC Evo View 4G has Wi-Fi 802.11 b/g/n, WiMAX 802.16 e, DLNA and Wi-Fi hotspot and it also spots Bluetooth version 3.0 with A2DP along with microUSB version 2.0 .

htc-evo-view-review2

Product Description from Manufacturer

The HTC EVO View 4G™ with Evernote integration captures your ideas however you have them. Seamlessly save and sort: doodles, voice recordings, marked-up emails, and notes, across multiple applications. And then easily access ideas from any device with Evernote, anywhere.
evo-view-reviews
Function following form
A tablet is not a phone. So why do so many tablets look like phones when they start up? Android 2.3 with HTC Sense on the EVO View 4G™ reimagines a user experience to reflect the 7” screen size and the enviable capabilities its hardware allows. Making typing easier, going through mail faster, while seamlessly staying in touch with the people and news that matter most to you.
 
The tablet sees all
With a 5 MP rear-facing camera for photos and HD video, as well as a front-facing 1.3 MP camera for photos and video chatting; the EVO View 4G™ is fully equipped to capture everything in your life.
Small and mighty
At 7" the EVO View 4G™ can fit places most other tablets can’t. And with Android 2.3, the newest version of HTC Sense, and a 1.5Ghz Qualcomm® Snapdragon® processor, it can do things most tablets can only dream of.
More memory, for your memory
With an expandable memory slot, the EVO View 4G™ allows you to save more music, brainstorms, notes, movies, photos, thought-starters, games, apps, emails, daydreams, and life-changing ideas then tablets with fixed memory.
 
The pen is mightier
The pen accessory with HTC’s Scribe Technology on the EVO View 4G™ takes note taking to a whole new level. Let your ideas flow as naturally as you have them. And when you’re ready to revisit them, or take an idea further, accessing your notes is a snap with integrated Evernote.
 
Additional key features of HTC Evo View 4G include:
  • 3G/4G Mobile Hotspot capability, supporting up to eight Wi-Fi enabled devices simultaneously 
  • Google mobile services such as Google Search, Gmail, Google Maps with Navigation, Voice Actions, and YouTube 
  • Corporate e-mail (Microsoft Exchange ActiveSync), personal (POP and IMAP) e-mail and instant messaging 
  • Android Market™ for access to more than 150,000 useful applications, widgets and games available for download to customize the experience 
  • Blockbuster On Demand® to rent or purchase the hottest new releases on the same day they become available on Blu-ray and DVD 
  • 32GB internal memory, 1GB RAM 
  • microSD slot (supports up to 32GB memory card) 
  • Wi-Fi b/g/n 
  • Bluetooth 3.0 
  • Integrated GPS 
  • 4000 mAh Lithium-ion battery   
With HTC Scribe Technology™, HTC Evo View 4G will offer a new way to interact with a tablet. HTC Scribe Technology introduces a unique digital pen to the tablet experience and unlocks new capabilities. When combined with Evernote™, a leading notes application and service, the user will have the ability to capture and make notes on Web pages, ebooks, PDF documents and more, in an easy and natural way.
Additionally, HTC Scribe enables enhanced voice-synchronized note taking using a feature called Timemark, making it possible to capture the audio of a meeting at the same time as written notes.
Also improving on the tablet experience, HTC Evo View 4G allows users to draw, take notes and highlight text on documents on the tablet with the HTC Scribe™ digital pen. Sold separately and available this summer, the enhanced functionality of the HTC Scribe brings creativity to life.
For example, the user can draw a sketch or add notations and highlight paragraphs, while reading an eBook, review and comment on PDF documents and add casual comment on photos.