¡Descarga los fondos de pantalla del Samsung Galaxy Note 5!

Samsung Galaxy Note 5

Tras una infinidad de rumores a lo largo de todo el año en curso, ya tenemos presentado y entre nosotros el nuevo phablet estrella Samsung Galaxy Note 5. La nueva generación viene a desbancar a toda la competencia que aparece en su sector y posicionarse nuevamente como la mejor opción a elegir por los consumidores de estos dispositivos de gran tamaño y prestaciones.

Esta vez no tratamos ningún aspecto del terminal, si no anunciar que ya han sido puestos a disposición de todos los fondos de pantalla que lucirá una vez pise todos los mercados y que podrán ser aplicados en tu pantalla de inicio.

¡Hazte con los fondos del Samsung Galaxy Note 5!

Como bien sabéis, cuando un nuevo terminal es presentado y puesto en venta es cuestión de días que aparezcan los fondos de pantalla que contienen. Esto sucede ya que, determinados usuarios que se hacen con un ejemplar del dispositivo, consiguen indagar dentro del terminal y ubicar la carpeta por defecto en la que están alojados todos ellos.

Al igual que la pasada vez con los flagship Samsung Galaxy S6 y S6 edge, los fondos son muy similares con un estilo abstracto y luciendo una preciosa paleta de colores unida mediante gradientes. Realmente son muy acertados, pues con los conocidos paneles SuperAMOLED que destacan los colores –a menudo muy saturados–, consiguen generar un impacto visual y acompañar las propias lineas de diseño de la capa de personalización TouchWiz.

En cuanto a los fondos, estos contienen un peso aproximado de 4 MB cada uno, con una resolución de 2560×2560 y seis alternativas a escoger. Esa resolución es fruto de estar pensados para múltiples pantallas de inicio, haciendo que el desplazamiento muestre una parte distinta de cada uno de los fondos de pantalla.

Imagen del Samsung Galaxy Note 5

La descarga directa la podéis realizar desde el servicio en la nube Google Drive, como siempre de forma libre y sin compromiso, ¡a disfrutarlos!

Google Drive | Fondos de pantalla del Samsung Galaxy Note 5

¿Y tú que piensas? Pásate por ¡Descarga los fondos de pantalla del Samsung Galaxy Note 5! para dejar tu huella.

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Publicado recientemente en Andro4all

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The rise, dominance, and epic fall – a brief look at Nokia’s history

A couple of years ago, Microsoft reached a deal to acquire Nokia’s struggling devices and services business, and just recently, the Finnish company sold its HERE mapping unit to a group of German car-makers.

It’s true that Nokia had terrible last five years, but this doesn’t take away the fact that it was this very company that effectively defined the mobile industry for over a decade prior, and gave us some of the most memorable phones.

In this article, we take a trip down memory lane to revisit Nokia’s history, which – hold your breath – spans a whopping 150 years.

Humble beginnings

While Nokia may remind most of us of only mobile phones, the company in fact started out as a paper mill, which was established in 1865 by mining engineer Fredrik Idestam at the Tammerkoski Rapids in south-western Finland.

However, the name Nokia wasn’t yet born. It was the location of his second mill – on the banks of the Nokianvirta river – that inspired Idestam to name his company Nokia Ab, something which happened in 1871. After around three decades, the company also ventured into electricity generation.

Meanwhile, Eduard Polón founded Finnish Rubber Works in 1898, and Arvid Wickström established Finnish Cable Works in 1912. In 1918, Finnish Rubber Works acquired Nokia to secure access to the latter’s hydro-power resources, and in 1922, Finnish Cable Works was also acquired by the newly formed conglomerate.

While the three companies were jointly owned, they continued to work independently until 1967, when they were finally merged and Nokia Corporation was born. The newly formed company mainly focused on four markets: paper, electronics, rubber, and cable. It developed things like toilet paper, bicycle and car tires, rubber footwear, TVs, communication cables, robotics, PCs, and military equipment, among others.

Portfolio expansion

In 1979, Nokia entered into a joint venture with leading Scandinavian color TV manufacturer Salora to create Mobira Oy, a radio telephone company. A few years later, Nokia launched the world’s first international cellular system dubbed Nordic Mobile Telephone network, which linked Sweden, Denmark, Norway, and Finland. This was followed by the launch of the company’s as well as world’s first car-phone dubbed Mobira Senator, which weighed in at around 10 kg.

In 1984, Nokia acquired Salora and changed the name of its telecommunications unit to Nokia-Mobira Oy. The year also marked the launch of Mobira Talkman, which was advertised as one of the first transportable phones. This means it could be used both in and out of car, although it was still around 5kg.

Three years later, the company introduced its first compact phone called Mobira Cityman 900, which was also the world’s first hand-held mobile telephone. Despite weighing around 800g and carrying a price tag of around $5,456, it sold like hot cakes.

The phone became iconic and was nicknamed “The Gorba” after the then Soviet Union president Mikhail Gorbachev used it to to make a call from Helsinki to Moscow during a press conference in October 1987.

The following year brought a tough phase for the company as it witnessed sharp drop in profits owing to severe price competition in the consumer electronics markets, and its chairman Kari Kairamo committed suicide reportedly due to stress.

The new leadership brought changes, dividing the company into six units: telecommunications, consumer electronics, cables and machinery, data, mobile phones, and basic industries, while divesting other units like flooring, paper, rubber, and ventilation systems. In 1989, Nokia-Mobira Oy became Nokia Mobile Phones.

Change in focus – mobile phones

In 1990’s, Nokia’s top leadership decided to focus solely on the telecommunications market, and as a result, the company’s data, power, television, tire, and cable units were sold off in the first few years of the decade.

In 1991, world’s first GSM call was made by the then Finnish prime minister, Harri Holkeri. Unsurprisingly, it was made using Nokia equipment. The next year, the company’s first hand-held GSM phone Nokia 1011 was launched.

The device reportedly had a talk time of 90 minutes and could store 99 contact numbers. It was also known as Mobira Cityman 2000.

A couple of years later, the company launched its 2100 series of phones, which were also…

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The Top 10 trending phones of week 33

As most of you have surely heard – the Galaxy Note5 and Galaxy S6 edge+ are now official. Samsung unveiled the pair of phablets at the June 13 Unpacked event and quite unsurprisingly, the announcement is already causing waves in our top ten chart.

The aforementioned Note5 managed to swoop in, mere hours after its announcement and take the second spot away from the OnePlus 2. Interestingly enough, however, the Galaxy S6 edge+ is still nowhere to be found in the top ten chart at the time of writing this article. This is rather odd, considering Samsung intentionally focused attention towards the edged model, slightly neglecting the Note and even limiting its EU availability for the time being. Judging from fan interest, however, it appears the Korean giant might have overlooked the Note a little too soon, as loyal fans are still showing their love for the legendary productivity line. But back to the chart.

At first place we find the Moto G (3rd gen) for yet another week. It seems the allure of a budget-friendly, “vanilla Android” device is still going strong. At third place we see another familiar device – the Galaxy Grand Prime. It is followed closely by the Galaxy A8 and the Galaxy S6, which have swapped places since last week and are now at fourth and sixth respectively.

The aforementioned OnePlus 2 has really dropped in interest during the past few days. That’s particularly confusing given that the smartphone official sales just started.

In the bottom half of the chart we find a rather odd new entry at seventh place – the budget-friendly Galaxy J5. This is its unexpected debut on the chart, so we can only imagine it is tied to an ongoing sales promotion and should be shot lived. Then again, we did say the same about the Lenovo K3 Note well over a month ago and it is still hanging on to the list, although dropping in popularity and now at eight place.

At the very bottom of the scoreboard we find the Galaxy A5, down a spot and the iPhone 6, which once managed to reenter the chart after a few consecutive weeks of absence.

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Motorola Moto G (3rd…

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Glass Paint Could Help Ships And Buildings Beat The Sun’s Heat

Sorry, sunlight. A new paint in development is designed to bounce the sun’s rays off of metal surfaces, such as those on buildings or military ships. The coating, made with a chemical precursor to glass, isn’t available yet. But if forthcoming field tests turn out as expected, the paint will slow down the wear and tear to structures that results from constant exposure to heat.

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