HTC Hero Training Guide Part Five

Friday, July 31, 2009

Yesterday we provided you with Part Four of the most complete training guide for the HTC Hero.  We can today offer part five for download.

 

Download Part Five Here

 

If you missed earlier parts:

Download Part One Here 

Download Part Two Here

Download Part Three Here

Download Part Four Here

The remaining parts will be available for download from http://blog.clove.co.uk over the next few days.


HTC Hero Unboxing – Part Two

Friday, July 31, 2009

Following on from our earlier post of the unboxing video of the HTC Hero, we can now bring you part two.  Dave at Geekanoids continues his our and review of the device.


HTC Hero Unboxing Video – Part One

Thursday, July 30, 2009

Only a matter of hours have passed since the first HTC Hero’s begun shipping and already we have unboxing videos available for viewing.

Dave over at Geekanoids has already got his video up online.

It gives a detailed unboxing of the Hero, allowing you to get a much more realistic view of what it looks like in real life and in hand.

You can view it below:

Want one – JUST CLICK HERE TO ORDER YOURS


HTC Hero TV Advert 8.56PM Tonight

Thursday, July 30, 2009

The HTC Hero units have begun shipping and many of you will be using them already.

If you have not got yours you an order it HERE.

Still not convinced and need more information?  Well if you watch Film4 at 8.56PM tonight you will find a new HTC Hero Advert.

Having signed a six month deal HTC have been advertising the Diamond2 and Magic for the last few months.  Tonight sees the first public screening of the Hero advert. Expected to be much more focused on the product itself, we all look forward to seeing it, so tune in at 8.56PM tonight on Film4 to find out more.


HTC Hero Training Guide Part Four

Thursday, July 30, 2009

Yesterday we provided you with Part Three of the most complete training guide for the HTC Hero.  We can today offer part four for download.

 

Download Part Four Here

 

If you missed earlier parts:

Download Part One Here 

Download Part Two Here

Download Part Three Here

The remaining parts will be available for download from http://blog.clove.co.uk over the next few days.


Microsoft and Yahoo have joined forces

Wednesday, July 29, 2009

yahoo bingYahoo and Microsoft have signed a deal today that will have some management at Google a little concerned. 

The two internet giants have agreed to partner for 10 years to develop search engine techniques.

Microsoft’s new Bing search engine will power the Yahoo website and Yahoo in turn become the advertising and sales team for Microsoft’s online offering.

This comes about as Microsoft has a great desire to compete and as Yahoo struggle to make profits.

In return for ceding control of its search engine, Yahoo will get to keep 88% of the revenue from all ad sales on its site for the first five years and have the right to sell adverts on some Microsoft sites.

Microsoft boss Steve Ballmer said the 10-year deal would provide Microsoft’s Bing search engine with the necessary scale to compete.

"Through this agreement with Yahoo, we will create more innovation in search, better value for advertisers, and real consumer choice in a market currently dominated by a single company," said Mr Ballmer.

Will Google have a challenge on their hands?  Only time will tell.

SOURCE: BBC


HTC Hero Training Guide Part Three

Wednesday, July 29, 2009

Yesterday we provided you with Part Two of the most complete training guide for the HTC Hero.  We can today offer part three for download.

 

Download Part Three Here

 

If you missed earlier parts:

Download Part One Here 

Download Part Two Here

The remaining parts will be available for download from http://blog.clove.co.uk over the next few days.


12 Free Android Applications – Part Two

Tuesday, July 28, 2009

Following on from yesterday post, here are the other 6 applications that the Lifehack team feel you can’t do without.

7. PrinterShare

PrinterShare lets you print over the Internet on your own printer at home or at the office. Sign up for a free account, install and configure the server software on the computer your printer is attached to, and then you can print from your Android phone from anywhere (so long as you have network access via 3G or wi-fi). The big drawback is that you’re fairly limited to the type of content that’s printable: contacts, photos, and webpages. However, with more and more work shifting to the Web, you can usually find a way to get your content into the web broswer to print it (e.g. sending email attachments to Google Docs and sharing as HTML).

8. RemoteDroid

RemoteDroid turns your Android phone into a remote touchpad and keyboard to control your PC. The screen becomes a touchpad just like you’d find on a laptop, with right-click and left-click buttons; the keyboard functions normally, except one of the alt keys becomes “CTRL” so you can do CTRL-keystroke combos like CTRL-V to paste.

RemoteDroid works over your home wi-fi network: you run the server on your PC and enter the IP address on the app to connect. If you’re trying to think of why you’d do this, consider watching video content on your big monitor or through your TV; now, you can use your phone to control the computer from across the room to pause, adjust volume, skip to the next video, or whatever.

9. ShareYourBoard

ShareYourBoard

This app is for storing and sharing whiteboards – after a meeting or presentation, open Share Your Board and snap a picture of your whiteboard. Share Your Board automatically trims the image (saving just the marked-on part of the board), adjusts contrast and color, and adjusts the perspective of the image, producing a flat, legible image that can be shared with others and commented on. You can take multiple images over the course of a meeting to assemble a kind of slide-show, too. Images can be shared via MMS, email, or sent to programs like Twidroid (a Twitter client), PostBot (a WordPress client – see Part 1), Picasa, or PrinterShare.

The image in the screenshot above was captured in an unlit corner of my apartment; the only lamp is a three-bulb unit across the room which uses compact fluorescent bulbs (which give an awful yellow cast to photos); my whiteboard is surrounded on all sides with index cards and business cards I’ve tucked into the frame. As you can see, it’s done a fairly good job of isolating the relevant stuff (there’s an index card at the bottom) and making a very readable image of the keyboard shortcuts for my transcription software.

10. Upvise

upvise

Upvise is collaborative project management software comprised of several modular “applications”: contacts, notebooks, projects, tasks, and so on. The Android app integrates with an online service (both free, though there is a paid “Premium” level that offers a few more features) so you’re not limited to collaborating with other Android users. Projects and notes can be shared, tasks can be assigned out, and ideas can be voted on by anyone in your group. A sales application allows business users to track and follow-up leads. One nice thing: the contacts application will import all your Google contacts (although, as far as I can tell, it doesn’t sync new contacts back to your Google address book).

11. StarContact

starcontact

StarContact is a replacement for the default Dialer software, allowing you to search your contact list (using the T9-style keypad shown in the screenshot, a more compact version, or the regular keyboard). You can also search within non-name fields in your contact list (like address, company name, and notes) as well as by initials. Other than that, it looks and acts like the normal dialer, making it easy to adapt to if you’re already used to using ANdroid’s built-in software.

12. Wapedia

wapedia

There are several Android apps for searching and displaying Wikipedia articles, and to be honest, they basically all do the same thing. Wapedia does it very quickly, with entries nicely formatted for the mobile screen and very good image rendering and scaling. You can also access specialized wiki sites, like the Muppet Wiki, Wookiepedia, WoWWiki (World of Warcraft), the Recipes Wiki, Wiktionary, and several others. 

(Note: Wapedia is a site that can be accessed from any browser, but here I’m talking about the dedicated app that acts as a front-end to the website.

SOURCE: Lifehack


HTC Hero – Live Photos

Tuesday, July 28, 2009

We know how much you like to see live shots of new devices.

Whilst we are no experts in unboxing videos, we will leave that to affiliates who do it so well; we thought we would bring you a few quick images of the Hero and its box just to wet your appetite until yours arrives at your door in the next couple of days.

So here are a few images (Click to enlarge):


DoubleTwist – Device Syncing

Tuesday, July 28, 2009

DoubleTwist is a nice little App that allows you to Sync your device (iPod, Mobile, Smartphone, Digital Camera, etc.) with your computer. Let’s face it, syncing software provided by device manufacturers isn’t always great. Applications such as iTunes are annoying at the best of times. This is where DoubleTwist steps in. The software is free to download, compatible with over 200 devices and runs on Windows, Mac or Linux. DoubleTwist can also be used to mimic the rip and burn technique employed by iTunes, and does it locally. It rips selected tracks at accelerated speeds and re-encodes the audio data to MP3, meaning that you don’t need to sync/burn to cd all the music that you download from the iTunes store. There’s a demo on the DoubleTwist site should you have any difficulty installing the software.