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Tuesday, August 26, 2014

How To Make Money Online - Guaranteed


Learn how we guarantee you’ll make money online in the next 30 days
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Wednesday, August 20, 2014

Make 150$ on one week

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Sunday, March 30, 2014

HOW TO install and run custom maps the easy way?



A.
HOW TO MANUALY INSTALL A CUSTOM MAP?
(don`t worry about the lenght of this tutorial.It is because I try to explain it "noob" friendly!)


According to many INSTALL-TUTORIALS in the internet, there are many divergent oppinions about how to install a custom map. Some may be right, some wrong.
This is my solution and I can say "it always seem to work":


1. UNZIP (unpack) the RAR file (you need a unpack-program like winrar or unrar. Just ask Mr.Google. Most of them are freeware)


2. now you have one file called mp_mapname.ff ("mapname" is just an example!) and maybe one called mp_mapname.gsc.
 
(The *.ff file is some kind of container-file (like a rar or a zip)       which includes all the data you need to play the map.
Some other maps you can find in the internet may have several more files e.g. a mp_mapname_beta.ff, mp_mapname.gsc
or *.iwd file. These additional files are not necessary generally! There a also maps which only have
a single mp_mapname.ff. It is different from case to case. So don`t worry about a single mp_mapname.ff even if the internet
will tell you otherwise. It will work!)


3. Go to your "Call of Duty 4 - Modern Warfare installation folder" (Where your COD4 game is installed)

Example : C:\Program Files\Activision\Call of Duty 4 - Modern Warfare\       (or wherever you installed COD4)


4. Search in your Call of Duty 4 - Modern Warfare installation folder a folder called "usermaps"
- if it does not exist, then create one!


5. After finding (or creating) the "usermaps" folder, you have to create another folder in your "usermaps" folder
which has the same name as the map you want to install (Example: map file name is "mp_mapname.ff - then the folder
will be named as "mp_mapname".)


6. Put your "mp_mapname.ff" into the "mp_mapname" directory.

(Finally, it should look like this : c:\Program Files\Activision\Call of Duty 4 - Modern Warfare\usermaps\mp_mapname\mp_mapname.ff)


7. The last thing you have to do is to place a SECOND copy of your "mp_mapname.ff" to the "english" folder
 (or "german",whatever your language version of COD4 is) in your "zone" folder of your COD4 installation directory.

(Example: C:\Program Files\Activision\Call of Duty 4 - Modern Warfare\zone\english\mp_mapname.ff)


9. Optionally you must paste your "mp_mapname.gsc"
(if there is one)
in "\Call of Duty 4 - Modern Warfare\raw\maps\mp".
(if these folders do not exist, create them!)

10. You are done...


B. IMPORTANT! HOW TO RUN A CUSTOM MAP IN A MULTIPLAYER GAME
-----------------------------------------------------------



Well, first of all you should mention this:

Call of Duty 4 is very,very user-unfriendly (shame on you - Infinity Ward!) when you want to play a custom (self-made) map!

So, read patiently... (or jump to 4. if you can`t wait)


1.When you play COD4 standard maps (the original ones) in the internet, you play with a so called "ranking-system".
The idea of the "ranking-system" is to get points (e.g by shooting the enemy) in order to unlock weapons or to unlock bonus features, called "perks".
So far so good...
The bad news are: YOU CAN`T EASILY PLAY YOUR OWN MAPS WHEN THE "RANKING-SYSTEM" IS ENABLED!
What you have to do is to start an "unranked" server! (explained later...)



2.The next problem is, when you start an "unranked-Server", you can`t easily enable the "auto-download" function!!!

WTF does this mean?

Well, normally it should be, that when you launched a server with your own custom map, everybody who starts your server in the server-list would automatically download your map before he enters. This is meant with "auto-download".

Sounds bad? Yes, it is! NO AUTO DOWNLOAD !!! An error will alway occur when tried to "auto-download" a custom map!
(this error will look like this: "map Whatthefuckwasthename is different from the server")


3. SO WTF IS THE SOLUTION?


Well, there will be no problems as long all players do install the map manually (check HOW TO INSTALL A CUSTOM MAP? above).
This means that everybody who wants to play should download the custom map from the same mirror-site (for example from www.cod4crank.jimdo.com)
and install it the way I described.
 
There are more sophisticated solutions but they are very difficult!
(maybe I`ll explain them later...)

4. DAMN! BE CONCRETE! HOW TO EASILY SET UP A MULTIPLAYER GAME WITH YOUR CUSTOM MAP???

 
1. All players (and the host, of course!) should download the same version (!) of the map from the same source in the internet!

2. The map must be installed manually. Look above, i did explain you how...

3. The server host has to start COD4, then enable the "modwarfare" mod (under "Mods" in COD4 Startup-Page). (Wait, until Programm automatically restarts!)

4. After that, the host should start a server the usual way.
ATTENTION: your custom maps will not appear in the map-list when you start your server. You have to start them later in the server console.
(don`t worry, that is easy... I wil explain you soon...)
Select an original map at first and set "dedicated internet"!!!

5. Start the server. COD4 will exit, a console will appear...

6. In console, type "map mp_mapname" (without ") - mapname=the name of your installed custom map -  and hit ENTER.

7. Server launches your custom map, the host will have to restart COD4 (KEEP CONSOLE OPEN!!!), search his server in serverlist
( SERVERFILTER MUST BE SET TO "MODS: ALL" ), refresh serverlist, log on server, have fun...

Saturday, March 29, 2014

How to Hide Email Addresses when Sending to Multiple Recipients in Outlook 2013



00_lead_image_spam_email
When sending email to multiple recipients (some of whom are unknown to each other), it’s recommended not to display everyone’s email address. Some people might get quite upset with you for advertising their email address to people they don’t know.
Generally, when you send email to multiple recipients, you enter their email addresses in the Cc (Carbon Copy) field, where their addresses are visible to everyone receiving the email. This is acceptable if all the people already know each other and may even have the email addresses. However, if some of the people you’re including in the Cc field do not know each other, it’s not a good idea to use the Cc field and advertise everyone’s email address to everyone else.
This is where the Bcc (Blind Carbon Copy) field comes in. Putting an email address in the Bcc field basically instructs the mail server to take off the address label before delivering the message so anyone receiving the email message cannot see who else received it. So, you can put all the email addresses of the recipients in the Bcc field. However, only putting email addresses in the Bcc field, with no address (or your own address) in the To field, may cause the message to be flagged as Spam by some junk email filters.
There is a way around this. We will show you how to use your own email address as “Undisclosed recipients” for the To field and add the other email addresses to the Bcc field so you can safely send your message.
Open Outlook and click the People link on the Navigation Bar.
01_clicking_people
NOTE: If you have the Navigation Bar displaying in the compact view, click the people icon.
See our article to learn how to display the Navigation Bar in the compact view.
02_clicking_people_on_compact_navigation
In the New section of the Home tab, click New Contact.
03_clicking_new_contact
In the Full Name edit box, enter a name for this contact that will display in the To field. You can call it “Undisclosed recipients” or any other name you want. Enter your own email address in the E-mail field and click Save & Close.
04_creating_new_contact
Now, click Mail on the Navigation Bar. If you have the compact Navigation Bar, click the envelope icon.
05_clicking_mail
In the New section of the Home tab, click New Email.
06_clicking_new_email
Click To on the Message window.
07_clicking_to
Select the new contact made for your own email address, click To, and then click OK.
08_selecting_undisclosed_recipients
You may notice that there is no Bcc field available on the Message window. You have to add it. To do this, click the Options tab, and in the Show Fields section, click Bcc.
09_showing_the_bcc_field
RELATED ARTICLE
How to Hide Email Addresses when Sending to Multiple Recipients in Outlook 2013
When sending email to multiple recipients (some of whom are unknown to each other), it’s recommended not to display everyone’s... [Read Article]
The Bcc field is added to the Message window. Add the email addresses for all the people you want to receive this email either by clicking the Bcc button and selecting them, or by entering them manually in the Bcc field. As you start typing an address in the Bcc field, a matching address from your address book is suggested.
NOTE: You can also create a distribution list containing all the email addresses you to which you often send emails as a group. See our article about creating distributions lists in Outlook 2013 to find out how.
Some ISPs (Internet Service Providers) may put limits on the number of people to which you can send one email. In this case, try sending the message to 20 recipients or less at a time per email.
10_entering_bcc_recipients
If you send one email to multiple recipients with all the addresses visible to all, you can cause some people to receive spam, if some people on your list are not careful with the email addresses they have. There are plenty of other ways spammers can get your email address.

HTG Reviews the Nixplay: A Wi-Fi Picture Frame that Actually Works



The digital picture frame market got off to a rough start; early frames were clunky, had tiny screens, very few features, and required you to manually update the pictures. Read on as we review the Nixplay, a next generation digital picture frame with Wi-Fi connectivity, cloud-based photo sharing, and a pile of user-friendly features.

What Is The Nixplay?

The Nixplay is the first Wi-Fi enabled digital picture frame from the Nix company (although their first networked offering, they’ve been in the digital picture frame business for quite awhile). As of this review the Nixplay lineup consists of one model, the W08A which sports an 8″ 800×600 pixel screen; the company has plans for additional Nixplay units with larger and higher resolution screens.
The frames support JPEG/JPG images and video in the H.264 format. The frame is a matte black rubber and the screen surface is matte. There are two visible protusions on the front of the frame: the larger dome on the left hand side is a motion sensor (used to turn the frame off when no one is in the room) and the smaller centered plastic window is the IR receiver for the unit’s remote control (seen in the photo below).
Although every Nixplay unit has an SD card slot and USB port for local file loading, the frame’s killer feature is the cloud-based photo management. Each Nixplay unit comes with a free standard Nixplay account that allows you to upload photos, import photos from Facebook, Instagram, and Picasa Web albums, as well as accept photos via email (each Nixplay account has a custom email address). The free standard account is good for one frame, up to 5,000 photos, and 10 unique slideshows (essentially the Nixplay equivalent of categories/albums).
Users who want to manage multiple frames and/or increase their storage can subscribe to the Nixplay Plus plan for $3.99 a month which will allow for up to five frames per account, 30GB of cloud-based photo storage, 50 unique slideshows, and all photos will be stored in their original resolution. Given that nearly every internet-enabled digital picture frame requires a paid subscription for full functionality, we’re quite pleased to see that the Nixplay only requires a paid subscription for users who actually, well, use the service a lot. It’s perfectly reasonable to have a small fee when the bandwidth and storage demands go up.
So how does the Nixplay work? Let’s take a look at the setup required, how to send photos to the frame, and then get down to the good, the bad, and the verdict.

How Do I Set It Up?

Setup is very straight forward and should take less than ten minutes (most of that time will be spent letting the device boot and update its software). We suggest setting it up at your computer (or have a laptop handy to finish the process if you wish to place the unit where you want it right out of the box).
Unpack the unit, attach the frame easel piece, plug the unit it, and unwrap the remote. Press the power button on the remote or the back of the unit to start it. Once the unit has finished booting you’ll be presented with a list of available Wi-Fi nodes. Even if you have no intention of using the cloud-based service you will still need to connect to the servers at least once to initialize the unit and check for updates.
After your Nixplay picture frame is connected to your Wi-Fi it will download any available updates, apply them, restart itself, and then present you with a simple white screen with a 16 digit serial number. Take that serial number and head over to the Nixplay website.
Click on Activate Frame in the upper right corner and follow the activation instructions. You’ll need to supply the 16 digit serial number, your last and first name, a valid email address, and you’ll select a username for the Nixplay service (this will be the email address that people can send photos to username@mynixplay.com so pick a practical one like firstnamelastname). Once you’ve provided all the necessary information, the Nixplay servers will send a confirmation word to your Nixplay frame which you then enter into the sign up page. Ours was, rather cheerily, “Happiness”.
Once you enter the word prompt from the Nixplay screen, you can hope over to your Nixplay web account and start loading pictures. Before we do that however, we want to point out one of the fantastic little touches that really sell the Nixplay photo frame as the photo frame to get for all those aunts, uncles, grandparents, and great grandparents in your life: they included a remote management tool for all the settings. From the unit itself, you can go into a settings menu to adjust things like when the unit sleeps, how the motion detection works, whether or not the unit should display the most recent photos or start from the beginning each time, etc. Realistically, if you’re giving this photo frame to a relative specifically because they’re not heavy social media/computer users and you want a way to share digital photos with them, it’s great that you can also remotely manage the device. When you’re logged into your Nixplay account, all you have to do is click on Frames and then the specific frame you want to manage and you’ll see this panel:
That’s every single adjustable option sans the Wi-Fi settings and the screen brightness. We can’t tell  you how pleased we are they included a remote way to adjust the frame; this way when Great Grandma calls and says the pictures are changing too fast we don’t have to walk her through navigating the menus, we can just adjust it and ask if she likes the new speed.
Now that we’ve drawn your attention to that great feature, we’re ready to start putting pictures on the frame.

How Do I Use It?

At this point you can return to the main Nixplay page and log into your account for the first time. You’ll be greeted with an empty control panel. On the left hand side of the screen you’ll have shortcuts to albums, slideshows, individual frames (these are the physical frames you’ve activated with the service), and general settings and subscriptions. By default you have one empty “demo” album. We’ll return to that demo album in a moment. Now remember, the Nixplay unit does have an SD card slot and a USB port so you can always just load pictures on some flash media and stick it into the picture frame; what sets the Nixplay apart is the cloud-storage, however, so that’s what we’re focused on.
On the right side of the screen you’ll have a list of all your slideshows. Don’t be confused here by the fact that they named the sample photo album “Demo” and the sample slideshow “Demo”, albums and slideshows are separate things.
Just about everything in the Nixplay control panel is drag and drop friendly. If you want to get started right away, you can drag some sample photos from a folder on your computer right onto the Demo album, then turn right around and drag the Demo album right over to the Slideshow column:
At this point, you should notice a little cloud icon blinking in the upper corner of the display on your Nixplay picture frame; the unit is communicating with the servers and downloading your photos. Because there were no photos to display when you first set it up, the unit should still be idling at the menu screen like so:
Press the “slideshow” button on the remote or use the arrow keys located on the back of the frame to select slideshow and click OK. Your photos should load up:
At the very start of the slideshow, a little box displays at the bottom which indicates how many new files have been added to the slideshow that day. That’s a nice little touch, especially if you’re setting up the picture frame for a relative; they’ll be notified new photos will be appearing in the slideshow that day.
In addition to manually uploading images to Nixplay, you can also have Nixplay automatically pull photos from albums you’ve created on Facebook, Picasa, and Instagram. For example, let’s say you use Facebook primarily as a tool for keeping up with friends and family via sharing family pictures and you want to share those family pictures with an older relative who isn’t on Facebook. You could simply add either your Timeline Photos album or a specific album of family photos to your Nixplay picture frame by clicking on Albums -> Facebook and logging in to authorize Nixplay to access your photos.
Once you’ve authorized Nixplay to access your Facebook photos (or Picsasa/Instagram photos), it’s the exact same process that we outlined above. You simply drag and drop the whole photo album from that service (or open the album and select specific photos), over to the Slideshows sidebar just like we did with the Demo album (keep in mind that if you want automatic updating between your photo account and the frame, you need to add the while album and not just some pictures from the album):
The final way to add pictures from the cloud is to use email. By default Nixplay has an email filter enabled; only those email addresses you whitelist can send pictures to the frame. While you can turn the filter off, we think whitelisting addresses to allow them to automatically send pictures is a wise idea. To enable email sharing click on Albums -> Email Albums. At first, you’ll have nothing to look at as there are no albums; click on “Manage Settings” in the corner of the Email Albums pane to change that:
Click on “Add New Contact” and add any email addresses you wish to whitelist. At minimum we’d recommend whitelisting your own, even if you don’t intend to enable other friends or relatives to use the feature, simply so you can always use the email gateway to upload pictures. It’s super handy, for example, to be able to BCC: your Nixplay address when sending vacation photos to your mom or brother so that those photos also end up on Grandma’s Nixplay frame.
When you enter a new contact, including yourself, you have the option to have the photos either sit in a holding pen waiting for you to sort them, or automatically send them to a slideshow. The email function is a great way to extend the reach of the picture frame to many relatives, while having one person do the actual management; if you give a frame to Great Grandma, for example, you can add the email addresses of grand children, great grand children, etc. and have all of them send photos to the frame.

The Good, The Bad, and the Verdict

We’ve played with it, we’ve emailed it photos, we’ve dumped social media albums onto it,  we even took it over the river and through the woods to Grandma’s house and left it with her. What’s the verdict at the end of the day?
The Good:
  • Multiple methods of sharing photos with the frames; you can share them via the Nixplay webpage, via email, and from Facebook, Instagram, and Picasa albums.
  • Includes both an SD card slot and USB port for fast local loading (and with those external slots, even if the company folds you can still keep using the frame sans cloud-sharing functionality).
  • Motion detection and time-based-sleep minimizes power use and keeps the frame on only whens someone is around to look at it.
  • Simple setup and remote album management makes it perfect for less than tech-savvy relatives.
  • The $99 price point is very reasonable for the quality of the product and the number of features included; it’s currently the best value in the Wi-Fi enabled picture frame category and offers so much more than other email-only picture frames; the free-for-the-first-frame business model is also superior to other companies that require $5-15 accounts for even a single frame.
  • It’s fast; photos sent by email or transferred from the web portal appear on the Nixplay unit within around 5 seconds.
The Bad: 
  • While adequate for the task, the 800×600 resolution screen is rather low-resolution in the age of retina display tablets and razor sharp computer monitors.
  • The screen is 4:3 ratio, but most digital camera photos are 3:2; as such there is a black band at the top and bottom of photos that aren’t manually cropped. The picture frame does include a function, found within the settings menu, that allows you to switch from shrink-to-fit to fill-the-screen but the fill-the-screen function isn’t a crop-to-fit but a fill-and-pan function. This is an awkward solution when it would be more appropriate to simply not crop vertical shots and crop horizontal shots just enough to remove the letterbox effect.
  • We’d asking for extras now, but we’d love for the the ability to append photos with a short 160 character Twitter-style text tag. We’ve already seen that the frame can overlay a message in a light gray box (like it does when it tells you that there are 20 new photos from that day, for example). It would be great if we could hijack that function to add a small meta-data text overlay so that we could add information for those relatives we’re sharing photos with like “John tasting ice cream for the first time” or “First trip to the county fair”.
The Verdict: Despite our complaints about the lower resolution of the screen, the slightly kludgy built-in cropping, the Nixplay’s benefits far outweigh the minor problems. It’s a great value at $99. You get free everything for a single frame and a very reasonable $3.99 a month for multiple frames. The Nixplay web portal is very user friendly and it is very easy to set up automatic picture sharing via email and Facebook/Picasa/Instagram albums. It’s a near zero-configuration/zero-fuss photo frame that’s perfect for giving to relatives so you can share photos with them automatically. And, as we mentioned earlier in the review, we’re thrilled with the remote-management functionality where you can adjust the actual frame settings from afar. To date it’s our favorite digital photo frame and we’ve already planned to purchase one for all the grandparents and great grandparents that need their grandkid-photo-fix every day.

Monday, March 24, 2014

Microsoft announces DirectX 12 for computers, smartphones and Xbox One

DirectX 12, the next version of Microsoft’s gaming / graphics programming interface, was revealed on Thursday during the annual Game Developers Conference. Unlike previous iterations that have required new hardware, DX12 will run on existing computers, smartphones and even the Xbox One.
AMD, Intel, Nvidia and Qualcomm – four of the world’s largest chipmakers – have already come forward and said the new APIs would run on their current crop of chips. What we don’t yet know, however, is whether or not DX12 will work on Windows 7. If not, that could drive more people to upgrade to Windows 8 or perhaps even the next major Microsoft OS depending on when that arrives.
The new APIs will no doubt deliver enhanced performance but just how big of an improvement we can expect is yet another unknown. As The Verge recalls, Microsoft showed those in attendance how the APIs could cut the time that a single CPU core spends on a task in half simply by offloading said task to the GPU.
What’s more, the Redmond-based company also claims it can reduce the power consumption of GPUs found in smartphones – a move that would result in improved battery life and not-as-hot devices.
In speaking to Microsoft’s Anuj Gosalia about the announcement, however, the publication learned that DX12 might not have a huge impact on Xbox One titles. The system, along with the PlayStation 4, have a tough time running top-tier games at max resolution and DX12 won’t necessarily improve that nor will it offer any new graphical effects.
Microsoft said a preview will be available later this year although the first DX12-based games won’t ship until the 2015 holiday season.

Sunday, March 16, 2014

5 beautiful Android live wallpapers that won't kill your battery

Google added live wallpapers to Android way back in version 2.1, which first appeared on the venerable Nexus One. At the time, it was little more than a curiosity, a gimmick. Most live wallpapers guzzled battery life and were entirely too flashy to have moving around behind your icons.
Four years later, live wallpapers have evolved into something that can make your phone feel alive and personal, without the obvious drawbacks. Let's check out five live wallpapers that are as easy on the battery as they are on the eyes.

Muzei

This live wallpaper is a newer arrival in the Play Store, and it does operates a bit differently than most other apps in this category. Muzei (a transliteration of the Russian word музей, meaning “museum”) pulls in beautiful high-resolution images and rotates them in as your background.
The "live" part of the wallpaper comes in the way it applies dim and blur filters, which keeps the home screen from being too busy, but you can double-tap at any time to see the unblurred image for a few seconds.
Perhaps the best thing about Muzei is the fabulous ecosystem of extensions that add new sources of images; there's always something new with Muzei. It's completely free in Google Play.

Custom Beam

The Phase Beam live wallpaper has been included in most builds of Android since Ice Cream Sandwich. It's easy on the battery and doesn't get in the way of icons too much, but it's a little boring, and completely lacks options. A good alternative is Custom Beam, which allows you to produce the same effect, but with all manner of variables to tweak. If you don't like the blue/purple default look, you can change it to anything you like.
Custom Beam includes settings for the speed of the animation, shape of the lens flare effects, and even the angle of the color gradient. It can also change based on your battery state as a subtle reminder it's time to plug in. The basic color-changing features are included free, but it will cost $1.49 to unlock everything else.

Mountains Now

Google Now is at the center of Google's Android plans—so much so that the art style seems prevalent in everything Google does. The Mountains Now live wallpaper imagines what it would be like if that cute little Google Now header image came to life and took over your homescreen.
The result, as you might imagine, is adorable. Little ships float past, mountains appear in the foreground, and the clouds drift onward as your perspective shifts.
The real killer feature in Mountains Now is that it can use your device's gyroscope to produce a parallax effect as the phone is tilted. Even with the animation speed and motions sensing turned up, I never see Mountains Now show up on my battery monitor. The clean lines and solid colors don't get in the way of your icons, either. The full app costs $1.63, but there is a free version with a subset of the features.

Wave

The Wave live wallpaper is a bit like Custom Beam in that it's absolutely overflowing with settings. It produces a series of smooth waves and lines of glowing energy that undulate across the screen. It's vaguely reminiscent of the background you see on a Playstation 3 or PSP.
The colors, speed, and magnitude of the waves can be altered to produce very different effects. Because Wave includes such extensive settings, you can easily tune it to your device so it's smooth and power efficient.
Even at a modest frame rate with the detail level turned down, Wave can look impressive, but higher settings have never caused me any unacceptable battery drain. Wave costs $1.49 in Google Play, but there's a free trial too.

Space Colony

Space Colony from Maxelus is by far the most detailed live wallpaper on this list, but it's shockingly easy on the battery. This wallpaper depicts a futuristic skyline shrouded in glowing fog on your homescreen. You get to choose from a dozen different backdrops, color schemes, and lighting effects.
The camera slowly pans across the sky and slides through the narrow gaps between the glowing towers, but you can change the camera's path at any time with a quick double-tap on the screen.
Even with the frame rate set reasonably high, this live wallpaper almost never causes any detectable battery drain. For the full raft of settings, you'll need to drop $1.95 via an in-app purchase.

The Galaxy S4 – A Life Companion

Galaxy Guide: GS4, Note 2, Note 10.1

The Galaxy S4 – A Life Companion

- 5” Full HD Super AMOLED screen
- Capture more with Dual Shot functionality
- Join in the conversation with S Translator
- Smart Pause follows your every move.
By bringing together features that make our lives richer, simpler and a lot more fun, the Samsung Galaxy S4 is the perfect life companion.
Life is full of great moments that need to be captured. With the Galaxy S4 this is taken to a whole new level. Dual Shot mode allows for both the front/rear facing cameras to create one synchronised picture, while the Sound and Shot mode enhances your photography with audio recordings from the moment.
Galaxy S4 - life companion
Galaxy S4 - S Translator
Galaxy S4 - Smart Pause
Galaxy S4 - S Health
Galaxy S4 - captures all the fun

To bring people closer together, the Galaxy S4 includes features such as S Translator and ChatON. S Translator allows you to text or speak a sentence, and for it then to be translated into your choice of language. You’ll never feel out of place again. And with ChatON, sharing your thoughts, even what’s on your screen, has never been simpler.
To enhance productivity, the Galaxy S4 has Smart Pause, which uses the very latest in eye recognition technology. By intuitively following your eye, it knows when to pause or play what you are watching on the screen. It’s the perfect tool for multitasking.
With new features like S Health, the Galaxy S4 becomes much more than a phone. By monitoring your fitness levels and daily goals, while also ensuring that general settings are optimised to your lifestyle, the Galaxy S4 is a device that fits around you, and not the other way around.

Enhancing Creativity with Galaxy Note II

- Pressure-sensitive embedded S Pen
- 5.5” HD Super AMOLED screen
- 1.6GHz Quad Core processor
Inspiration can strike anywhere, at any time, so be ready with the right mobile device. The Samsung Galaxy Note II comes with its own highly-sensitive S Pen, which allows you to write, draw and express yourself with all the precision of a real pen. So, the next time you feel the urge to sketch a beautiful landscape but you didn’t bring paper and a pencil, don’t worry – your Galaxy Note II is all you need.
With the Popup Note feature, you can also make a quick note at a moment's notice – perfect for when you need to write down an insight during a meeting or take directions to an appointment. 
Galaxy Note II
Thanks to advanced handwriting integration, your handwritten notes can also be converted automatically to plain text that you can edit or send in a message straight away.
You can create and combine all kinds of content with the Galaxy Note II. S Note gives you a range of tools and templates to bring your ideas to life, and thanks to Easy Clip, you can copy and paste or send onscreen text and images easily and instantly.
Galaxy Note II - S Note
Galaxy Note II - editing
Previewing your pictures is also much quicker. You don’t have to open any folders – just hover the S Pen over an image and a preview will appear. With your Galaxy Note II, it's so much easier to achieve a more productive and creative life – even on the go.

Do More at Home with Galaxy Note 10.1

-10.1" HD WXGA TFT screen
- Pressure-sensitive S Pen
- 1.4GHz Quad Core processor
If you're looking for a new way to keep you and your family entertained, as well as learn, produce and discover, then the Galaxy Note 10.1 is the perfect addition to your home. Its large and clear 10.1" screen is the perfect size for sharing, so it's ideal for reading an eBook to the children or watching movies and other entertainment in vivid high definition.
Galaxy Note 10.1 - Photoshop Touch
Galaxy Note 10.1 - multi screen
Galaxy Note 10.1 - Need for Speed
Galaxy Note 10.1 - Photoshop Touch
Galaxy Note 10.1 - creativity

Discovering content with your Galaxy Note 10.1 is easy – just use Samsung’s Video Hub service to download movies and TV shows to your device. Learning Hub also gives you access to a wide range of educational materials for all ages. And, if you want to combine work and play, real PC-like multitasking is also possible. The Multiscreen feature lets you watch a video and write a document or message at the same time.
The Galaxy Note 10.1 offers you the power to create content as well as enjoy it. With the embedded S Pen, S Note software and powerful digital tools, you’ll be able to produce all kinds of documents, from magazine articles to personalised birthday greetings. Adobe Photoshop Touch also offers highly sophisticated image editing and creation, so you can touch up your photos or make new and amazing artworks.
Choosing the right device makes life richer and easier in all sorts of ways. Explore the Samsung Galaxy family and discover the one that’s best for you and your household.