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CNET también está disponible en español. Don't show this again. The ad shows a bunch of glum Apple fans waiting in line for a new gadget, before a Samsung Galaxy Note owner walks past and causes the Cupertino loyalists to lose faith, bursting through the barriers and breaking into song upon seeing the Note's gigantic AMOLED screen and, er, stylus. The ad is pretty daft, and tech fans who follow the battle between Samsung and Apple will only really get a kick out of the first bit, which features a few decent lines like, "Samsung.. again?!" and one confused gadgeteer musing, "I don't know what I believe in any more.".
The ad craftily never mentions Apple by name, but the target of Samsung's fun-poking ads is obvious -- we've spent enough time queuing for Apple products to know when a group of fans is being lampooned, and the shop the fans are lining up in front of is highly Apple-esque, This isn't the first time Samsung's poked fun at the iPhone crowd -- an earlier ad saw a similar bunch of trendysomethings waiting in line, only to have their minds changed by the Galaxy S2, Samsung may be mocking Apple over the airwaves, but the real battle takes place on the high street, where Apple is winning hands-down, Samsung has confirmed it won't be showing off its much-anticipated Galaxy S3 at Mobile World Congress at the end of the month, instead choosing to debut its i work hard so my dog can have a better life iphone case new flagship at a separate event..
Very Apple-esque if you ask us (which you did, implicitly, by hanging around on our website). But does Samsung have the strength to tilt with Apple? Or will the iPhone 5 leave all other mobiles in the dust? And is that really The Darkness' Justin Hawkins (we think so)? Tell us in the comments, or on our Facebook wall. Samsung's poking fun at Apple fans again, this time in the Superb Owl ad for the Galaxy Note, starring, er, Justin Hawkins?. Samsung's poking fun at Apple fans again, with a new ad for the Galaxy Note, aired during this big sporting event in America called the Superb Owl, whatever that is.
CNET también está disponible en español, Don't show this again, Nokia's i work hard so my dog can have a better life iphone case attempt takes the idea a step closer to users by introducing a practical application, showing not only that the screen can work while being manipulated, but also that there is a reason to do it, Tapani Jokinen is the principal designer at Nokia, and explains that using a flexible display wouldn't necessarily replace multi-touch input, but could be used in unison with it, "The idea is that the Kinetic UI gives a new way to interact with devices; one that is intuitive and simple to use," said Jokinen..
"To perform an action with the Kinetic UI, you physically manipulate the device, and this deformation gives a varying and proportional resistance to the action, and thus feedback to the user. With appropriate mechanical design, the flexibility of the device can be tuned to give varying physical resistance, whilst the software can be tuned to give a proportional and analog response to the input.". Jokinen notes that this could allow for greater user control over certain aspects of the user experience, like gaming, for example. The use of a user interface like the Kinetic UI could also make it easy to use a device when your hands are in gloves — a problem more relevant to those in Finland than in Australia, but this notion could be extrapolated to times when the screen won't accurately detect touch input, like when your hands are wet, for example.
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