December 21, 2014
Mohenjo
Technical
amazon, Apps and Software, BlackBerry, business, Business News, Hotels, human-rights, iphone case, Laurence Hallier, medicine, mental-health, mobile, QWERTY keyboard, research, Reviews, Ryan Seacrest, Science, Science News, Tech, technology, Technology News, travel, typo, vacation

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The iPhone’s answer to the BlackBerry keyboard, the Ryan Seacrest-backed Typo, is back. Like the first model, the Typo 2 turns your Apple smartphone into one with a QWERTY keyboard.
But the second version is a bit different — and this makes sense, considering Typo was hit with a lawsuit and pulled off the market for having a design too close to BlackBerry’s existing keyboard.
Seacrest and Typo cofounder Laurence Hallier developed the concept after realizing how some people lug around two phones: one for typing and correspondence and an iPhone for most everything else. The two developed the case for BlackBerry fans who’ve resisted switching to the iOS because of loyalty to a physical keyboard.
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BlackBerry Type keyboard for iphone
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http://mashable.com/2014/12/15/typo-2-review/?utm_cid=mash-com-Tw-main-link
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November 20, 2013
Mohenjo
Technical
amazon, Audio, business, Business News, chromecast, consumer electronics world, Google, Google Chrome, Health, Hotels, human-rights, Is the Google Chromecast worth buying?, medicine, mental-health, netflix, pandora, price point, research, Reviews, Science, Science News, Should you buy the Google Chromecast?, streaming, technology, Technology News, Tell Technology, travel, vacation, YouTube
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Google took the consumer electronics world in July by storm with the announcement of the Google Chromecast HDMI Streaming Media Player, a digital media dongle available at the unbelievably low price point of $35.
The arrival of the Chromecast was a big surprise for several reasons. I keep on top of all the tech rumor sites every day, and I hadn’t heard so much as a rumor that Google was working on a media dongle, much less one for $35. There’s also Google’s very checkered record when it comes to hardware releases, which included the “Nexus Q,” another media streaming device introduced in the summer of 2012 that was ultimately cancelled before release.
But the Chromecast was something different: A super-cheap streaming solution, controllable from a smartphone or tablet, and a product that was released the day it was announced. In addition, it offered “browser-casting” from the Google Chrome browser on a computer. That, and the low price point, led to the Chromecast’s instant popularity.
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