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Friday, August 12, 2011

Facebook unveils revamp to games platform


Hot on the heels of Google's launch of social gaming on its nascent Google+ project, Facebook's announced changes this evening to its gaming system it says will make games easier to find and play.
Those who play games on the social network will now have a separate stream that displays their friends' game activity, as well as their scores and achievements in a ticker, Jared Morgenstern, Facebook's product manager for games and credits, wrote in a Facebook blog.
"The best way to find new games is through friends, and now you'll have more opportunities to see what they're playing, he said. Friends will be able to start playing games immediately by clicking on the name of the game.
Game players will also be able to control who sees the games they are playing, as well which games are visible to those friends, he said. Players will also be able to add frequently games to their homepage bookmarks section.
The social-networking giant is also introducing a bigger game screen for "a more immersive experience," Morgenstern said. Games such as CityVille, Zoo World, Monster World, and Mystery Manor will get full-screen expandability in the next few days.
The changes come as Google took the wraps off a gaming element for Google+, the social network the company launched at the end of June. The new offering lets Google+ users play games from within the social network, including some that can be played with other Google+ users.
Some of the launch games include Rovio's Angry Birds, PopCap's Bejeweled Blitz, and Zynga's Poker. It's a tiny collection compared with what's offered on Facebook, which has made a booming business by offering social games that players can click away at while remaining within the social network's walls.

Thursday, August 11, 2011

A First Look at Facebook Messenger


Checking Facebook messages on your phone is now one-tap easy.
Facebook has published a new free app for iPhone and Android, Facebook Messenger, that unbundles its private message service from the all-in-one Facebook app. Rather than trying to combine your entire online life into one app, it goes the other way: Messenger, when launched, goes straight to your Facebook messages, so you can read and reply to them without having to navigate through all of Facebook.
Messenger also pushes messages to the forefront of your phone with optional settings that provide multiple ways for your phone to notify you that you’ve got a new message. On Android it can vibrate, blink, play a sound, or play a ringtone.

If you’ve spent as much time as I have tapping though the Facebook app impatiently trying to check messages while the Facebook app tries to load photos and notifications instead, Messenger is a very practical gift. You tap it and poof, up pops your Facebook inbox. That’s it. For me, it’s great because my Facebook inbox contains timely messages from people who want to make plans with me, but who aren’t the professional colleagues in my separate e-mail account, or the guy waiting in the car outside sending me text messages I need to see right this second. I can ignore my Facebook inbox for hours until I have the attention for it. Then, I can check those messages with one thumb-tap while doing something else in the real world. I’m much less likely to get hit by a bus thanks to this thing.
I wish more app developers would think this way: Instead of trying to combine everything on the Internet into one mobile interface, create separate apps for standalone functions that people perform often and want to do in a hurry. Let the phone’s home screen be the thing that contains and presents them all. Whoever coded this app at Facebook might not win geek points for programming prowess, but they’ve made Facebook more convenient for a lot of users. Can I next get an app that jumps straight to my groups?
My only skepticism is that the Messenger name might confuse potential users into thinking it’s an instant messaging app, like MSN Messenger or BlackBerry Messenger. Why not call it Messages? To any Facebook user, that would be obvious

Catch Bheja Fry 2 on YouTube Boxoffice absolutely free

After releasing Bheja Fry 2 to users in the US on YouTube rentals, our partner Shemaroo Entertainment has now taken the lead to bring Bheja Fry 2 to users in India absolutely free of cost on YouTube Boxoffice. Bheja Fry 2 will be the first movie to be released on YouTube Box Office preceding its television premiere and will be available to users in India for the entire month of August.

YouTube BoxOffice is the special channel launched by YouTube in India and features blockbuster movies every month for free. Bheja Fry 2 is a sequel to the 2007 low budget but extremely popular film Bheja Fry and was released in theatres on June 17, 2011. The film stars Vinay Pathak as Bharat Bhushan, the character who was loved and adored by all in its first release. Kay Kay Menonand Minissha Lamba are the other leading stars in the film. Users will be able to enjoy the movie in HD format ensuring better viewing experience with enhanced audio and video quality.


                           The channel has previously featured movies like Band Baaja Baaraat and 3 Idiots that attracted more than 6 million channel views. Apart from featuring full length movies, the channel also engages the users with movie trivia and contests. Users can also choose from over 1500 titles of popular movies in the YouTube catalogue of movies including regional language films in Gujarati, Marathi, Telugu, Tamil and Bengali.

Friday, July 22, 2011

Sprint Motorola Titanium durable QWERTY smartphone

Sprint has confirmed bring the Motorola Titanium smartphone on July 24th. This candybar Motorola handset is a durable QWERTY phone that certified to military specification 810G for shock, dust, vibration, solar radiation, low pressure, high temperature and low temperature.
The interesting phone is running on Android 2.1 Éclair OS and packs a 3.1-inch capacitive touchscreen display with HVGA (480 x 320) resolution, an 1820 mAh Lithium-ion battery.
New Motorola Titanium ‘professionals’ smartphone is brings Wi-Fi 802.11b/g/n, GPS, a microSD card slot (a 2GB card bundled), stereo Bluetooth, and a 5 megapixel autofocus camera with LED flash. In additional, it is support for push-to-talk capabilities.
Cost of the Sprint Motorola Titanium sleek smartphone is $149.99 with a new 2-year contract and after a $100 mail-in rebate.