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Monday 20 April 2015

Apple Acquired Linx Israeli Camera Company

Latest News of Apple


Recently Apple has acquired LinX, an Israeli camera tech company whose recent offerings are a camera which is multi-aperture models and can enable effects like background focus blur, parallax images and 3D picture capture. This statement is provided by company officials.

Apple acquiressmaller technology companies from time to time.
The acquisition was valued at around $20 million according to the Wall Street Journal. The Israeli startup’s hardware was targeted at tablets and smartphones specifically.

Apple also planning to include putting the tech to use in its notebooks, replacing those old cameras modules with better performing parts while respecting size constraints. This could be very helpful and handy in building devices like the MacBook, for instance, while retaining better picture quality.

One of LinX’s big stated hardware features and advanteges, according to the company’s own communications, is achieving selective focus post-capture in camera. This is a popular option for modern devices, and one that Apple could benefit and lead market from in future devices. Still, the big advantages of the multi-aperture design for the iPhone maker are probably around producing the best results in terms of low light, HDR and color fidelity with general, everyday picture-taking.

Monday 6 April 2015

Samsung Galaxy s6 Specifications

The wait is over Now for those who are samsung mobile phone lover. THE GOOD The upscale Samsung Galaxy S6's smooth glass-and-matte-metal body, improved fingerprint reader, and convenient new camera shortcut key make the phone a stunner. Samsung's decluttered take on Android 5.0 brings the beauty inside, too.

THE BAD Longtime fans will bristle at the Galaxy S6's nonremovable battery and absent expandable storage. The phone has an intensely reflective backing and looks embarrassingly like the iPhone 6. Battery life, while good, falls short of last year's Galaxy.

THE BOTTOM LINE Worldly looks and top-notch specs make the impressive, metal Samsung Galaxy S6 the Android phone to beat for 2015.


The Galaxy S6 leaves much of its Galaxy S5 DNA behind. Perhaps even more shocking than this materials about-face are the decisions to seal in the battery and leave out a microSD card slot, both choices made in service to staying slim. These are commonplace omissions in the smartphone sphere, but Samsung has been a die-hard defendant of both the removable battery and the extra storage option, until now. It's a move that makes a difference, too, at least on the power front. The S6's ticker ran down faster than last year's S5 did on a single charge.

In many ways, Samsung had no choice but to adopt this svelte, metal chassis and a pared-down, less "bloated" variation of Android 5.0 Lollipop. These moves silence customer complaints about the Galaxy S5's (and S4 and S3's) plasticky build, while also girding Samsung against staggering iPhone profits and an army of decent low-cost rivals from Lenovo, Xiaomi and Huawei.

Luckily for Samsung, the S6 is good enough to win back straying fans while also surpassing the all-metal HTC One M9 in extra features, battery life and camera quality.