Lesson 8
Lesson 8
Computers everywhere
These days
every single
person is
known with
the word-
computer.
We can find
computers at
everywhere
around us. In
fact modern
world will be
incomplete
without
computers and their applications. It's almost impossible to
even imagine the modern facilities without the use of
computers. For many individuals computer means PC, on
which they can see movies, play games, prepare office
sheets and manage daily planners. But this is just a page
of the book of computers.
To know more..
Think about What difficulties can you find while you are working in
a public places?. Write it in some words and Send it to the teacher.
Smartphone
A mobile
phone (also
known as a
cellular
phone, cell
phone and a
hand phone)
is a device
that can
make and
receive
telephone
calls over a
radio link
whilst moving around a wide geographic area. It does so
by connecting to a cellular network provided by a mobile
phone operator, allowing access to the public telephone
network. By contrast, a cordless telephone is used only
within the short range of a single, private base station.
In addition to telephony, modern mobile phones also
support a wide variety of other services such as text
messaging, MMS, email, Internet access, short-range
wireless communications (infrared, Bluetooth), business
applications, gaming and photography. Mobile phones that
offer these and more general computing capabilities are
referred to as smartphones.
The first hand-held mobile phone was demonstrated by Dr
Martin Cooper of Motorola in 1973, using a handset
weighing around 1 kg. In 1983, the DynaTAC 8000x was
the first to be commercially available. In the twenty years
from 1990 to 2011, worldwide mobile phone subscriptions
grew from 12.4 million to over 5.6 billion, penetrating the
developing economies and reaching the bottom of the
economic pyramid
Iphone
In 2007,
Apple Inc.
introduced its
first iPhone.
It was initially
costly, priced
at $499 for
the cheaper
of two
models on
top of a two
year
contract. The
first mobile
phone to use a multi-touch interface, the iPhone was
notable for its use of a large touchscreen for direct finger
input as its main means of interaction, instead of having a
stylus, keyboard, and/or keypad, which were the typical
input methods for other smartphones at the time. The
iPhone featured a web browser that Ars Technica then
described as "far superior" to anything offered by that of its
competitors. Initially lacking the capability to install native
applications beyond the ones built-in to its OS, at WWDC
in June 2007 Apple announced that the iPhone would
support third-party "web 2.0 applications" running in its
web browser that share the look and feel of the iPhone
interface. As a result of the iPhone's initial inability to
install third-party native applications, some reviewers did
not consider the originally released device to accurately fit
the definition of a smartphone "by conventional terms." A
process called jailbreaking emerged quickly to provide
unofficial third-party native applications. The different
functions of the iPhone (including a GPS unit, kitchen
timer, radio, map book, calendar, notepad, and many
others) allowed consumers to replace all of these items.
In July 2008, Apple introduced its second generation
iPhone with a lower list price starting at $199 and 3G
support. Released with it, Apple also created the App
Store, adding the capability for any iPhone or iPod Touch
to officially execute additional native applications (both
free and paid) installed directly over a Wi-Fi or cellular
network, without the more typical process at the time of
requiring a PC for installation. Applications could
additionally be browsed through and downloaded directly
via the iTunes software client on Macintosh and Windows
PCs, rather than by searching through multiple sites
across the Internet. Featuring over 500 applications at
launch, Apple's App Store was immediately very popular,
quickly growing to become a huge success.
In June 2010, Apple introduced iOS 4, which included
APIs to allow third-party applications to multitask, and the
iPhone 4, which included a 960×640 pixel display with a
pixel density of 326 pixels per inch (ppi), a 5 megapixel
camera with LED flash capable of recording HD video in
720p at 30 frames per second, a front-facing VGA camera
for videoconferencing, an 800 MHz processor, and other
improvements. In early 2011 the iPhone 4 became
available through Verizon Wireless, ending AT&T's
exclusivity of the handset in the U.S., and allowing the
handset's 3G connection to be used as a wireless Wi-Fi
hotspot for the first time, to up to 5 other devices. Software
updates subsequently added this capability to other
iPhones running iOS 4.
The iPhone 4S was announced on October 4, 2011,
improving upon the iPhone 4 with a dual core A5
processor, an 8 megapixel camera capable of recording
1080p video at 30 frames per second, World phone
capability allowing it to work on both GSM & CDMA
networks, and the Siri automated voice assistant. On
October 10, Apple announced that over one million iPhone
4Ss had been pre-ordered within the first 24 hours of it
being on sale, beating the 600,000 device record set by
the iPhone 4, despite the iPhone 4S failing to impress
some critics at the announcement due to their
expectations of an "iPhone 5" with rumored drastic
changes compared to the iPhone 4 such as a new case
design and larger screen. Along with the iPhone 4S Apple
also released iOS 5 and iCloud, untethering iOS devices
from Macintosh or Windows PCs for device activation,
backup, and synchronization, along with additional new
and improved features.
There are about 35 percent of Americans that have some
sort of smartphone. This shows that the market is
spreading fast and there are also more capabilities for
smartphones because of this spread.
Smartphones are also mainly valuable based on the
operating system. For example, the iPhone runs on the
iOS and other devices run different operating systems
which makes the functionality of these systems different.
Something went
Iphone, more than a smartphone
wrong :(
Ruffle failed to load the Flash SWF file.
Android
The Android
operating
system for
smartphones
was released
in 2008.
Android is an
open-source
platform
backed by
Google,
along with
major
hardware
and software developers (such as Intel, HTC, ARM,
Motorola and Samsung, to name a few), that form the
Open Handset Alliance. The first phone to use Android
was the HTC Dream, branded for distribution by T-Mobile
as the G1. The software suite included on the phone
consists of integration with Google's proprietary
applications, such as Maps, Calendar, and Gmail, and a
full HTML web browser. Android supports the execution of
native applications and a preemptive multitasking
capability (in the form of services). Third-party apps are
available via Google Play (released October 2008 as
Android Market), including both free and paid apps.
In January 2010, Google launched the Nexus One
smartphone using its Android OS. Although Android has
multi-touch abilities, Google initially removed that feature
from the Nexus One, but it was added through a firmware
update on February 2, 2010.
Concerning the Xperia Play smartphone, an analyst at
CCS Insight said in March 2011 that "Console wars are
moving to the mobile platform". In the same month, the
HTC EVO 3D was announced by HTC Corporation, which
can produce 3D effects with no need for special glasses
(autostereoscopy). The HTC EVO 3D was officially
released on June 24, 2011
Symbian
In 2000, the
touchscreen
Ericsson
R380
Smartphone
was
released. It
was the first
device to use
an open
operating
system, the
Symbian OS. It was the first device marketed as a
'smartphone'. It combined the functions of a mobile phone
and a personal digital assistant (PDA). In December 1999
the magazine Popular Science appointed the Ericsson
R380 Smartphone to one of the most important advances
in science and technology. It was a groundbreaking device
since it was as small and light as a normal mobile phone.
In 2002 it was followed up by P800.
Also in 2000, the Nokia 9210 communicator was
introduced, which was the first color screen model from
the Nokia Communicator line. It was a true smartphone
with an open operating system, the Symbian OS. It was
followed by the 9500 Communicator, which also was
Nokia's first cameraphone and first Wi-Fi phone. The 9300
Communicator was smaller, and the latest E90
Communicator includes GPS. The Nokia Communicator
model is remarkable for also having been the most costly
phone model sold by a major brand for almost the full life
of the model series, costing easily 20% and sometimes
40% more than the next most expensive smartphone by
any major producer.
In 2007 Nokia launched the Nokia N95 which integrated a
wide range of multimedia features into a consumer-
oriented smartphone: GPS, a 5 megapixel camera with
autofocus and LED flash, 3G and Wi-Fi connectivity and
TV-out. In the next few years these features would
become standard on high-end smartphones. The Nokia
6110 Navigator is a Symbian based dedicated GPS phone
introduced in June 2007.
February 2009 Samsung launched the i8910hd with well
working touchscreen under Symbian, 8 megapixel camera
with built-in photoshop-app, HD-video and full internet on
it's big size screen.
In 2010 Nokia released the Nokia N8 smartphone with a
stylus-free capacitive touchscreen, the first device to use
the new Symbian^3 OS. It featured a 12 megapixel
camera with Xenon flash able to record HD video in 720p,
described by Mobile Burn as the best camera in a phone,
and satellite navigation that Mobile Choice described as
the best on any phone. It also featured a front-facing VGA
camera for videoconferencing.
Symbian was the number one smartphone platform by
market share from 1996 until 2011 when it dropped to
second place behind Google's Android OS.
Activities
The first smartphones were devices that mainly combined the functions of
a personal digital assistant ( ) and a mobile phone or camera phone.
Tablet
A tablet computer, or
a tablet, is a mobile
computer, larger than
a mobile phone or
personal digital
assistant, integrated
into a flat touch
screen and primarily
operated by touching
the screen rather
than using a physical
keyboard. It often
uses an onscreen virtual keyboard, a passive stylus pen,
or a digital pen.The term may also apply to a variety of
form factors that differ in position of the screen with
respect to a keyboard. The standard form is called slate,
which does not have an integrated keyboard but may be
connected to one with a wireless link or a USB port.
Convertible notebook computers have an integrated
keyboard that can be hidden by a swivel joint or slide joint,
exposing only the screen for touch operation. Hybrids
have a detachable keyboard so that the touch screen can
be used as a stand-alone tablet. Booklets include two
touch screens, and can be used as a notebook by
displaying a virtual keyboard in one of them.
Early examples of the information tablet concept originated
in the 19th and 20th centuries mainly as prototypes and
concept ideas; prominently, Alan Kay's Dynabook of 1968.
The first commercial portable electronic devices based on
the concept appeared at the end of the 20th century.
During the 2000s Microsoft attempted a relatively
unsuccessful product line with Microsoft Tablet PC, which
carved a niche market at hospitals and outdoor
businesses. In 2010, Apple released the iPad, which used
touch screen technology similar to that used in their
iPhone and became the first mobile computer tablet to
achieve worldwide commercial success.
Besides having most PC computer capabilities, popular,
typical tablet computers purchased in the last year include
wireless Internet browsing functions, potential cell phone
functions, GPS navigation, and video camera functions,
weigh around two or three pounds (1-1.5 kilograms) and
typically have a battery life of three to ten hours. In many
ways the functions and purposes of laptops and tablets
and smartphones are drawing closer.
Advantages
▪ Usage in environments not conducive to a keyboard and mouse
such as lying in bed, standing, or handling with a single hand.
▪ Lighter weight, lower power models can function similarly to
dedicated E-book readers like the Amazon Kindle.
▪ Touch environment makes navigation easier than conventional
use of keyboard and mouse or touch pad in certain contexts such
as image manipulation, musical, or mouse oriented games and for
people with certain disabilities.
▪ Digital painting and image editing are more precise and intuitive
than painting or sketching with a mouse.
▪ The ability for easier or faster entry of diagrams, mathematical
notations, and symbols.
▪ Allows, with the proper software, universal input, independent
from different keyboard localizations.
▪ Some users find it more direct and pleasant to use a stylus, pen
or finger to point and tap on objects, rather than use a mouse or
touchpad, which are not directly connected to the pointer on
screen.
▪ Current tablets typically have longer battery life than laptops or
netbooks.
Disadvantages
▪ Higher price - convertible tablet computers can cost significantly
more than non-tablet portable PCs although this premium has
been predicted to fall.
▪ Slower input speed - handwriting or typing on a virtual keyboard
can be significantly slower than typing speed on a conventional
keyboard, the latter of which can be as high as 50-150 WPM;
however, Slideit, Swype and other technologies are offered in an
effort to narrow the gap. Some devices also support external
keyboards (e.g.: Most tablets can accept Bluetooth keyboards and
USB keyboards through Dock Connector-to-USB adapter.)
▪ Less user-friendly ergonomics - a tablet computer, or a folded
slate PC, does not provide room for a wrist rest. In addition, the
user will need to move his or her arm constantly while writing.
▪ More knowledge of the programs is needed - because, for
example, information on icons is not obtained by pointing at them.
(The Compaq Concerto from 1992 did not have this weakness.)
▪ Weaker video capabilities - Most tablet computers are equipped
with embedded graphics processors instead of discrete graphics
cards. In July 2010, one of tablet PCs with a discrete graphics card
was the HP TouchSmart tm2t, which has the ATI Mobility Radeon
HD5450 as an optional extra.
▪ Business-oriented tablet personal computers have been slower
sellers from 2001 to date.
▪ Higher screen risk - Tablet computers are handled more than
conventional laptops, yet many are built on similar frames; in
addition, since their screens also serve as input devices, they run a
higher risk of screen damage from impacts and misuse.
▪ Higher hinge risk - A convertible tablet computer's screen hinge is
often required to rotate around two axes, unlike a normal laptop
screen, subsequently increasing the number of possible
mechanical and electrical (digitizer and video cables, embedded
Wi-Fi antennas, etc.) failure points.
APPLE
The iPad
runs a
version of
iOS which
was first
created for
the iPhone
and iPod
Touch.
Although
built on the
same
underlying Unix implementation as MacOS, the operating
system differs radically at the graphical user interface
level. iOS is designed for finger based use and has none
of the tiny features which required a stylus on earlier
tablets. Apple introduced responsive multi touch gestures,
like moving two fingers apart to zoom in. iOS is built for the
ARM architecture, which uses less power, and so gives
better battery life than the Intel devices used by Windows
tablets. Previous to the iPad's launch, there were long
standing rumors of an Apple tablet, though they were often
about a product running Mac OS X and being in line with
Apple's Macintosh computers. This became partially true
when a 3rd party offered customized Macbooks with pen
input, known as the Modbook.
Previous to Apple's commercialization of the iPad,
Axiotron introduced at Macworld in 2007 an aftermarket,
heavily modified Apple MacBook called Modbook, a Mac
OS X-based tablet personal computer. The Modbook uses
Apple's Inkwell for handwriting and gesture recognition,
and uses digitization hardware from Wacom. To get Mac
OS X to talk to the digitizer on the integrated tablet, the
Modbook is supplied with a third-party driver called
TabletMagic; Wacom does not provide driver support for
this device.
ANDROID
Google's
Linux-based
Android
operating
system has
been
targeted by
tablet
Other Tablets
Microsoft
Following
Windows for
Pen
Computing,
Microsoft has
been
developing
support for
tablets
runnings Windows under the Microsoft Tablet PC name.
According to a 2001 Microsoft definition of the term,
"Microsoft Tablet PCs" are pen-based, fully functional x86
PCs with handwriting and voice recognition functionality.
Tablet PCs use the same hardware as normal laptops but
add support for pen input. For specialized support for pen
input, Microsoft released Windows XP Tablet PC Edition.
Today there is no tablet specific version of Windows but
instead support is built in to both Home and Business
versions of Windows Vista and Windows 7. Tablets
running Windows get the added functionality of using the
touchscreen for mouse input, hand writing recognition, and
gesture support. Following Tablet PC, Microsoft
announced the UMPC initiative in 2006 which brought
Windows tablets to a smaller, touch-centric form factor.
This was relaunched in 2010 as Slate PC, to promote
tablets running Windows 7, ahead of Apple's iPad launch.
Slate PCs are expected to benefit from mobile hardware
advances derived from the success of the netbooks.
Microsoft has since announced Windows 8 which will have
features designed for touch input, while running on both
PCs and ARM architecture. Microsoft states multiple builds
are needed, with 1 build for x86 processors and with 3
builds for ARM; ARM targets are defined for NVIDIA,
Qualcomm, and TI processors.
While many tablet manufacturers are moving to the ARM
architecture with lighter operating systems, Microsoft has
stood firm to Windows. Though Microsoft has Windows CE
for ARM support it has kept its target market for the
smartphone industry with Windows Mobile and the new
Windows CE 6 based Windows Phone. Some
manufacturers, however, still have shown prototypes of
Windows CE-based tablets running a custom shell.
Windows 8 will come a new line of Microsoft OS called
Windows on ARM(WOA) which will be windows designed
for ARM.Both Windows 8 and WOA will use Metro UI and
is designed for both touch and keyboard\mouse.
Linux
One early implementation of a Linux tablet was the
ProGear by FrontPath. The ProGear used a Transmeta
chip and a resistive digitizer. The ProGear initially came
with a version of Slackware Linux, but could later be
bought with Windows 98. Because these computers are
general purpose IBM PC compatible machines, they can
run many different operating systems. However, the device
is no longer for sale and FrontPath has ceased operations.
It is important to note that many touch screen sub-
notebook computers can run any of several Linux
distributions with little customization.
X.org now supports screen rotation and tablet input
through Wacom drivers, and handwriting recognition
software from both the Qt-based Qtopia and GTK+-based
Internet Tablet OS provide promising free and open source
systems for future development. KDE's Plasma Active is
graphical environments for tablet.
Open source note taking software in Linux includes
applications such as Xournal (which supports PDF file
annotation), Gournal (a Gnome based note taking
application), and the Java-based Jarnal (which supports
handwriting recognition as a built-in function). Before the
advent of the aforementioned software, many users had to
rely on on-screen keyboards and alternative text input
methods like Dasher. There is a stand alone handwriting
recognition program available, CellWriter, which requires
users to write letters separately in a grid.
A number of Linux based OS projects are dedicated to
tablet PCs, but many desktop distributions now have
tablet-friendly interfaces allowing the full set of desktop
features on the smaller devices. Since all these are open
source, they are freely available and can be run or ported
to devices that conform to the tablet PC design. Maemo
(rebranded MeeGo in 2010), a Debian Linux based
graphical user environment, was developed for the Nokia
Internet Tablet devices (770, N800, N810 & N900). It is
currently in generation 5, and has a vast array of
applications available in both official and user supported
repositories. Ubuntu since version 11.04 has used the
tablet-friendly Unity UI, and many other distributions (such
as Fedora) use the also tablet-friendly Gnome shell (which
can also be installed in Ubuntu if preferred). Previously the
Ubuntu Netbook Remix edition was one of the only linux
distibutions offering a tablet interface with all the
applications and features of a desktop distribution, but this
has been phased out with the expansion of Unity to the
desktop. A large number of distributions now have
touchscreen support of some kind, even if their interfaces
are not well suited to touch operation.
Canonical has hinted that Ubuntu will be available on
tablets, as well as phones and smart televisions, by 2014.
MeeGo
MeeGo is a Linux-based operating system developed by
Intel and Nokia that supports Netbooks, Smartphones and
Tablet PCs. In 2010, Nokia and Intel combined the Maemo
and Moblin projects to form MeeGo. The first tablet using
MeeGo is the Neofonie WeTab launched September 2010
in Germany. The WeTab uses an extended version of the
MeeGo operating system called WeTab OS. WeTab OS
adds runtimes for Android and Adobe AIR and provides a
proprietary user interface optimized for the WeTab device.
On 27 September 2011 it was announced by the Linux
Foundation that MeeGo will be replaced in 2012 by Tizen,
an open source mobile operating system.
Blackberry
The BlackBerry PlayBook is a tablet computer announced
in September 2010 which runs the BlackBerry Tablet OS.
The OS is based on the QNX system that Research in
Motion acquired in early 2010. Delivery to developers and
enterprise customers is expected in October 2010. The
BlackBerry PlayBook was officially released to US and
Canadian consumers on April 19, 2011.
HP
Hewlett Packard announced the TouchPad, running
webOS 3.0 on a 1.2Ghz Snapdragon CPU, would be
released in June 2011. On August 18, 2011, HP
announced the discontinuation of the TouchPad, due to
sluggish sales. HP has announced that they will release
webOS as open-source.
Activities
The iPad runs a version of which was first created for the iPhone and iPod
Touch. Although built on the same underlying Unix implementation as
MacOS, the operating system differs radically at the graphical user
interface level. iOS is designed for finger based use and has none of the
tiny features which required a stylus on earlier tablets. Apple introduced
responsive multi touch gestures, like moving two fingers apart to zoom in.
has since announced Windows 8 which will have features designed for
touch input, while running on both PCs and ARM architecture.
Nokia entered the tablet space with the Nokia 770 running , a Debian-
based Linux distribution custom-made for their Internet tablet line.
The BlackBerry is a tablet computer which runs the BlackBerry Tablet OS.
Apps
mobile
application
Also called
mobile apps,
it is a term
used to
describe
Internet applications that run on smartphones and other
mobile devices. Mobile applications usually help users by
connecting them to Internet services more commonly
accessed on desktop or notebook computers, or help them
by making it easier to use the Internet on their portable
devices. A mobile app may be a mobile Web site
bookmarking utility, a mobile-based instant messaging
client, Gmail for mobile, and many other applications.
App Development
Mobile application
development is the
process by which
application software
is developed for small
low-power handheld
devices such as
personal digital
assistants, enterprise
digital assistants or
mobile phones. These applications are either pre-installed
on phones during manufacture, downloaded by customers
from various mobile software distribution platforms, or web
applications delivered over HTTP which use server-side or
client-side processing (e.g. JavaScript) to provide an
"application-like" experience within a Web browser.
Execution environments
Tools
Application stores
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wrong :(
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Intelligent Home
Home
automation is the residential extension of "building
automation". It is automation of the home, housework or
household activity. Home automation may include
centralized control of lighting, HVAC (heating, ventilation
and air conditioning), appliances, and other systems, to
provide improved convenience, comfort, energy efficiency
and security. Home automation for the elderly and
disabled can provide increased quality of life for persons
who might otherwise require caregivers or institutional
care.
A home automation system integrates electrical devices in
a house with each other. The techniques employed in
home automation include those in building automation as
well as the control of domestic activities, such as home
entertainment systems, houseplant and yard watering, pet
feeding, changing the ambiance "scenes" for different
events (such as dinners or parties), and the use of
domestic robots. Devices may be connected through a
computer network to allow control by a personal computer,
and may allow remote access from the internet. Through
the integration of information technologies with the home
environment, systems and appliances are able to
communicate in an integrated manner which results in
convenience, energy efficiency, and safety benefits.
Although automated homes of the future have been staple
exhibits for World's Fairs and popular backgrounds in
science fiction, complexity, competition between vendors,
multiple incompatible standards and the resulting expense
have limited the penetration of home automation to homes
of the wealthy or ambitious hobbyists. Possibly the first
"home computer" was an experimental home automation
system in 1966.