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[ Cyber Secure Pakistan 2012 ] - Speaker Profile 2 - Mr. Nahil Mehmood

Mr. Nahil Mehmood has overall fourteen (14) years’ experience in telecom/banking networks, and IT Security and broad technical and management background with demonstrated leadership experience Nahil is currently CEO / Founder at Delta Communications. He is also serving as Chief Security Architect at Delta Tech. Formerly; he was CISO at one of the largest commercial banks in Pakistan, looking after IT Security & GRC, across the nationwide banking infrastructure. He was responsible for PCI-DSS implementation for MCB Bank. Read more
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[ Video ] - Samsung Galaxy Beam Projector Smartphone OFFICIAL HD Pictures & Specs!

The device’s dual-core 1 GHz CPU, 4-inch, 800×480 screen, 5-megapixel rear camera (with an additional VGA one on the front)

What makes it different from most other smartphones on the market is its ultra-bright, 15-lumen projector, which lets you project a 50-inch wide image on a wall – really handy for presentations or those moments when you want to share your holiday photos with your family and friends.

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Next Play Station would come to Mobiles

(Credit: Scott Stein)

I've had the PS Vita for a week. In that time, I've been impressed with the system's potential, and I appreciate the effectiveness of its dual analog sticks, but I've come away with one conclusion stronger than all the others: The Vita needs to be a phone.

By that I mean, in a phone. The current PS Vita, despite coming in a 3G flavor with AT&T mobile broadband, is far too large, and obviously couldn't be a phone, unless you used a Bluetooth or wired headset. However, the fingerprints of a phone-like OS are everywhere. The large, multitouch OLED screen, the gesture-based motions, the Android/iOS-like app icons, the open app pages, the web browser, the Twitter app, the front a rear-facing cameras...the PS Vita is so much like a phone that it becomes a hard device to describe to anyone who hasn't heard of it before.

I've explained the Vita to several people who didn't know about it, and while "next generation PSP" does get used quite a bit, so does "like a phone." The interface and the downloadable music, movies, and apps are phonelike, not gamelike. Here's why I think it could, and should, happen. Sony has already experimented with making a gaming phone. The Xperia Play worked from a hardware perspective. The failings of the Xperia Play were its branding and its limited software library. The "PlayStation Suite" games amounted to PlayStation 1 titles--not even PSP games. It was a disconnect for any PlayStation gamer, not to mention any iOS/Android gamer. The funny thing is, the Xperia Play is a great proof of concept for adopting physical buttons into a phone. The streaming gaming service OnLive runs on the Xperia Play, and having a control pad helps gaming as much as you'd expect.

OnLive's streaming game service running on an Xperia Play. Why not a VitaPhone next?

The Vita could easily fit into a smaller size device. The large 5-inch Vita OLED screen has a display resolution of 960x544. The iPhone 4s has a resolution of 960x640, in only 3.5 inches. The point being: the Vita screen could be shrunken down to four inches and be perfectly fine.

The original PSP's chief physical limitation was its UMD discs. Not anymore. The PSP Go dropped UMDs to become more pocketable, at the expense of its utility to most PSP owners. However, the Vita's game cards are tiny: smaller than an SD card, they're almost absurdly small compared to the size of the Vita itself. These cards could easily slot into a smaller piece of hardware: a shrunken-down next-gen Vita, or even a Vita phone.

The Vita, being so app-based, can survive as a platform, not just a product. Sony's experiments with PlayStation-certified tablets would be better served by adding Vita cross-compatibility in the future. That's probably been the plan all along. Vita games and apps should work on tablets or other devices, and it's not too difficult to imagine. Sony's Kaz Hirai has already hinted at the Vita OS moving to other products. Making a Vita phone would be a way of diversifying and keeping Vita gaming alive--there could, and should, still be a dedicated non-phone Vita, too.

Sony needs the Vita to have relevancy.

For most "non-hardcore" gamers, the Vita will be little more than an odd novelty. Versatility is key for the Vita in the long run to keep the platform from painting itself in a corner. If you don't think that's essential, then you simply haven't been paying attention to what's been happening in gaming. Yes, the Xbox 360 and PlayStation 3 have succeeded as "gamer systems," but they've also made great strides at being mass-market devices with kid-friendly peripherals like the Kinect and Move as well as evolving into set-top Blu-ray player/interactive TV boxes. While the idea of a Vita as a dedicated gaming device may have its charm, the truth is that building a dual-analog control pad and downloadable catalog of high-end Vita titles would be a killer way to turn an Android phone into the ultimate gaming smartphone. Make a Vita phone that works with PSP and Vita games--and runs Android apps--and Sony might actually have a vital competitor to the iPhone. There's only so much room in my pockets.

If I'm going out, do I take my PS Vita, or my phone? Of course I'm bringing my phone. Dedicated gaming devices are great for commutes or long trips, but I'm not likely to take it around like I do my phone. The sooner a Vita phone exists, the more likely it will be to stay in pockets.

I'd love to see it happen. Right now, the PS Vita is a strong piece of hardware with a small but compelling set of software that's simply too specified and high-priced to reach much further than a narrow market. That could easily change, though, in a year. And, let's face it: iPhone and Android games are the bleeding edge of the mobile game industry, but the lack of dedicated buttons crimps more hardcore mobile gaming. Sony, do you smell the opportunity?

Do you agree?

Read more: http://news.cnet.com/8301-17938_105-57382777-1/the-next-playstation-vita-can-and-should-be-a-phone/#ixzz1nAKkZ3yL

Scott Stein

Scott Stein, a CNET senior editor and laptop reviewer, is a bit of a New York Jets fan. He has written about tech, entertainment, video games, and viral culture for publications including Maxim, Esquire, and Men's Journal, and is a co-host of the CNET Labscast podcast. He's also been known to occasionally improvise in underground venues

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LG Optimus VU Smartphone Teaser

LG Optimus VU Smartphone. This would be an interesting addition to the smart phone industry.

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[ Video ] - PROTECT IP / SOPA Breaks the Internet as you know it

The video above discusses the Senate version of the House's Stop Online Piracy Act (SOPA). In the Senate the bill is called the PROTECT IP Act (PIPA). SOPA has gotten more attention than PIPA because it was moving faster in the legislative process. But PIPA is just as dangerous, and now it is moving faster. PIPA would give the government new powers to block Americans' access websites that corporations don't like. The bill lets corporations and the US government censor entire websites and cut sites off from advertising, payments and donations. This legislation will stifle free speech and innovation, and even threaten popular web services like Twitter, YouTube, and Facebook.
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