Take a quick look @ Samsung Galaxy SIII – The new Android 4.0 Phone !
South Korea’s Samsung Electronics unveiled its latest flagship smartphone — unveiled Galaxy S3 — in London as the company seeks to cement its position as the world’s top-selling mobile phone maker. Samsung Galaxy SIII is expected to become available in India in the coming weeks.
One of the most-waited phones of 2012, Samsung Galaxy Galaxy SIII succeeds company’s Galaxy SII.
Runs on Android 4.0
Samsung Galaxy S III runs on Android 4.0 (Ice Cream Sandwich). However, the default user interface of the OS is TouchWiz Nature UX, a custom skin prepared by Samsung.
Screen is 22% bigger than SII
Samsung’s latest Galaxy phone sports a 4.8-inch touchscreen with an HD Super Amoled display at 1280 x 720 pixels. Overall, the screen is reportedly 22% larger than Samsung Galaxy SII.
Can Facebook convince you to give up your organs?
Facebook unveiled an initiative to use the vast social network to help connect organ donors with people who need life-saving transplants. Nearly 7,000 people in the United States die each year while waiting for an organ transplant. It is a number that Facebook hopes to lower with its vast network of 161 million members in this country.

Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg announced the initiative and became one of the first Facebook users to sign up to donate on the social network.
Members of Facebook in the United States and Britain can now indicate that they are organ donors on their timelines, and if they are not donors, they can find links to official organ donation registries and instantly enroll. The company says it plans to add it in several other countries in the coming months. Globally, Facebook has about 900 million members.
Some experts in the field of organ donation agreed that Facebook could substantially help to change the culture, but they emphasized that the Web site would not become a de facto registry.
Source : New york times and AFP
How to do 2-Way File Transfer Between Android & PC Over Wi-Fi remotely
DropSpot sports two-way wireless file sharing between computer and Android device, and vice versa, over a shared Wi-Fi network. All you need to do in order to start sharing data is open the app on your device, feed in the IP address provided on the app’s homescreen in any contemporary web browser on your desktop, log in using the passcode (if any), and you’re good to go. The web interface of the app supports sending files in batch from computer to device via simple drag-and-drop. Similarly, you can use said feature to move your device’s locally stored files to required directories with utmost ease. Using the DropSpot mobile client, you can configure and even remove the authentication code.
DropSpot’s mobile app as well as the web interface sport minimalistic looks. As mentioned earlier, the mobile app, when launched, displays an IP address that you need to feed in to your computer’s web browser (address bar) to establish a connection. Tapping Menu > Preferences on the app’s homescreen takes you to another screen from where you can enable/disable Authentication, choose the Authentication Type (user-specified code or a randomly generated one), and specify a desired Login Code.








