If you are an Android customer desiring to get some Siri-style achievement on your Android invention a new app has started that will perform just that called Cluzee. It’s sort of like the alpha app called Iris we chatted about a small number days ago. The app sanctions you to chat regular expressions and it will then moves out and perform what you advise it to. The app is delineated as an educated private assistant. The app will answer to all types of uttered queries for instance “what is my plan like today.” 



It would then run down your plan for you in regular language. The app does more than that and will advise you little tidbits to aid you get along with your day. For case if you have a doctor’s selection on your plan the app can advise you if there is traffic on a actual thoroughfare you want to avert after it recollects you of that appointment.
Other things the app can perform embrace reading computer communications and text communications audibly to you. It can in addition take the user’s voice and amend it to text for conveying computer communications and SMS communications as well. I surprise how well the app works for amending dialogue to texts. I find more voice services don’t handle underscores well. Let us recognise what you consider if you are employing this app. You can download Cluzee here.





Reviews are rolling in for the world's first quad-core tablet, the Asus Transformer Prime, and so far the general consensus appears to be that there's a new king of Android tablets. The device cuts no corner when it comes to hardware specifications. Besides packing Nvidia's hot-off-the-presses Tegra 3 SoC, it also sports a 10.1-inch (1280 x 800) Super IPS+ panel covered in Gorilla Glass, 1GB of RAM and comes in either 32GB or 64GB sizes -- all wrapped in a 8.3mm-thick bushed metal casing that's a hair slimmer than the iPad 2 or Galaxy Tab 10.1.
Other specs include an 8-megapixel shooter on the back and a 1.3-megapixel camera on the front, as well as microHDMI and microSD ports. Like its predecessor, the Transformer Prime connects to an optional keyboard dock ($150) that adds an extra battery, a trackpad, and full-sized SD and USB ports.

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Google is working with Intel to release a version of Android designed to run on tablets, laptops and other computers with x86 chips. They've made some progress on that front, enabling Android 2.3 to run on embedded systems powered by an Atom E6xx series chip, but it seems the folks over at the Android-x86 project are a step ahead with the first release of Android 4.0.1 Ice Cream Sandwich for x86.
The port is currently optimized for tablets with AMD Brazos chips inside, including the MSI WindPad 110W or Acer Iconia Tab W500. It's still a little rough around the edges: Wi-Fi, touchscreen input and OpenGL ES hardware acceleration with the Brazos’ Radeon GPU are supported, but drivers for wired Ethernet connections, cameras, sound, and hardware-accelerated graphics output on Intel graphics adapters are still missing.
According to developer Chih-Wei Huang, posting in the android-x86 group, AMD is supporting the project by donating devices and offering technical advise from their engineers. Intel on the other hand appears focused on their own port of Android and so far has refused to give the Android-x86 project any support.

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The iPad-based news outlet, citing "sources," reported that Microsoft is working to adapt Office for Apple's tablet. The app could arrive before the next version of Office for Mac, which is expected to debut late next year.
(Credit: Apple)
Microsoft didn't comment directly on the report.
"We already deliver Office on multiple platforms and devices and are committed to expanding in the future, but have nothing further to share today," the company said in a statement.
Microsoft already offers a handful of apps for both the iPad and the iPhone, including Bing and Windows Live Messenger, among others. Creating Office for the iPad could help the device's prospects in work environments, a market where it's already making inroads at the expense of Windows PCs.

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Carrier IQ, the beleagured online metrics company that has been accused of installing spy software on millions of smartphones, has broken its silence to say the critics have it wrong.
"While a few individuals have identified that there is a great deal of information available to the Carrier IQ software inside the handset, our software does not record, store or transmit the contents of SMS messages, email, photographs, audio or video," the company said in a statement released late Thursday. 
The firm's defense came as as politicians and privacy organizations continued to question the little-known Mountain View, Calif., company, which designs communications analysis software used by some of the largest U.S. wireless carriers, including AT&T, Sprint and T-Mobile. The carriers say data collected on their behalf by Carrier IQ helps them improve their service.  

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The software is available free through a "download now" link for the beta on the Security Essentials Web site. But getting to the file itself requires a bit of a trek. Clicking on the link brings you to a Microsoft Connect page where you need to log in with a Windows Live ID and password.
You'll then see a page describing the features in the new beta along with the system requirements and installation instructions. Clicking on the link to the download page (listed in Step 2 of the instructions) displays the title of the file--MSE Public Beta. And then clicking on that title finally takes you to the page where you can actually download the software.

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Form:
Nokia N9 - 116.5x61.2x12.1mm, 135g
HTC Sensation - 126.1x65.4x11.3mm, 148g
The HTC Sensation looks very much like any other HTC smartphone. The proportions are nice and it’s got those distinctively HTC style rounded corners. Generally, it's very nice to look out but doesn’t live up to its name in terms of visual flair.
The N9’s looks are potentially pretty divisive. It is bold, brave and adventurous, but some might find it a bit ‘too much’ with wacky colours and a curved screen which contrasts with the extremely squared-off bodywork.
The handset actually looks much better coloured black in our view as the shape is already different enough, the bright cyan and magenta options are just a bit too jarring. The screen is really nicely shaped and extends right up to the edges of the device giving it a very sci-fi feel.
We actually like what Nokia has done here but with black bodywork - it’s got all the contrast it needs in the interesting shapes and looks far better with a more understated colour choice.
Winner – Nokia N9

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