Monday 26 January 2015

Facebook Lite for Android

            Facebook Lite Apk

This version of Facebook uses less data and works in all network conditions.


Facebook Lite is:

- Fast to install — the app is less than 1 MB

- Quick to load

- Efficient with data

- Designed for 2G networks and areas with limited network connectivity


Keeping up with friends is faster than ever. Facebook is free and always will be.


About Facebook:

- Message friends and have group conversations

- Get notifications when friends like and comment on your posts

- See what friends are up to

- Share updates and photos




Click to  Download

Saturday 24 January 2015

Great Off in HostGator




HostGator provides every customer with the necessary tools to get a fully-functional website up and running as quickly as possible. From our partnership with Weebly, providing an incredibly convenient drag-and-drop website builder, to our own QuickInstall application installer, you can have an amazing website online in no time!

Steps to Get this Offer 
*Click the hostgator picture in side of the blog... 
*Purchase your Web Hosting service
*At the time of purchase use the coupon
                 ANDROIDOFF
*After sometime coupon will be accepted and your amount will be reduced up to 10$...

Cheers!!!


Friday 23 January 2015

Full Wifi coverage for 20 Indian cities

Full Wi-Fi coverage for 20 Indian cities
At a time when the country is launching another round of spectrum auctions in February and telecom operators are vying for allocations, global telecom infrastructure provider UTStarcom is confident that India's top 20 cities will be fully Wi-Fi enabled by the end of 2015.
"Wi-Fi will compliment data offload applications, which is something that all operators are implementing worldwide. India also has started (on this). By the end of 2015, Wi-Fi will be a reality in India. It will be there in top 20 cities in India, full coverage," Rahul Pandey, director - sales (SAARC Countries) at UTStarcom, told IANS.
Wi-Fi is the popular term for a high-frequency wireless local area network technology.
UTStarcom, with its operation headquarters in Hong Kong, recorded a $160 million turnover in 2013, with India being the second highest market after Japan. The company has been present in India since 2000 and has worked extensively with private and public players in deploying telecom infrastructure.
"After 2G, everyone (operators) came to 3G and paid for spectrum. There will be a stage they will be running out of spectrum to expand. So, that is the time, typically, when Wi-Fi comes in," UTStarcom chief executive officer William Wong told IANS.
"When Wi-Fi comes in, the cost of carrying data will be around one-tenth. If they want to offload the traffic on 3G or 4G and move it to Wi-Fi, the operating expenses will be dramatically reduced. That's what exactly we see in Japan," he added.
The company is working with a host of operators and they are bullish and determined on Wi-Fi connectivity. "They will be doing in phased manner. Some of them have started in trail phase," Pandey said, declining to name the operators.
The company met Telecom Secretary Rakesh Garg in September 2014. Communications and IT Minister Ravi Shankar Prasad went to Japan after Prime Minister Narendra Modi's visit. Prasad inspected the UTStarcom deployment there.
"We have deployed more than 500,000 hotspots (Wi-Fi area), which means 1.5 million access points. The telecom secretary showed interest to replicate it in India," Pandey said.
The Indian government is extremely keen on speedy rollout of Wi-Fi services in the country.
"No policy problems. We have met all the telecom operators and they are finalising their budgets for Wi-Fi. The company is ready for deployment. We have expertise available. So it's not a challenge for us," Pandey added.
The company is focussing on the government's National Optical Fibre Network (NOFN) that will help it to deploy Wi-Fi in rural areas. NOFN is set to link 600 million rural citizens of India across 250,000 gram panchayats spread over 6,600 blocks and 631 districts through a broadband optical fibre network.
"We talk about affordable connectivity. By affordable connectivity, we are looking at things like what the country is already doing in 4G deployment. There is lack of spectrum. One of the quickest ways to reach high percentage of deployment would be the adoption of Wi-Fi," Wong said.
"We did half a million in Japan in half a year. With NOFN on schedule, we could be coupling hand in hand with NOFN deployment. The minute NOFN deployment is done we can connect places with Wi-Fi," he added.
Wong said UTStarcom's platform supports a very dense number of hotspots. One controller can manage up to 120,000 hotspots.
"Now we are looking at the government for acceleration in deployment in both public and private sectors. The Modi government is active in connecting not just the Metros but also rural areas. So, I believe they are taking the right steps. So India can catch up on the global stage," Shalin Shah, general manager, India operations, UTStarcom, told IANS.

Recover Your deleted photos in Android

         Recover Photos in Android

If your Android device has a microSD card slot, and you save your photos and videos to the memory card, you can use recovery software like the aforementioned PhotoRec to locate your missing images.

Otherwise, try a desktop software app like Kvisoft Data Recovery, which is available for Windows and Mac. The app will scan your Android device for deleted files for free, but in order to recover them, you have to upgrade to the paid version, which costs $70. Another option, though it’s Windows only, is Wondershare’s Dr. Fone for Android.

Here’s how to use the app:

Step 1: On your Android smartphone, make sure the USB debugging feature is enabled. To do this on an Android 5.0 device, go to Settings > About phone > Build number, and then tap a few times until you get a messaging saying, “You are now a developer!” Return to the Settings menu, select Developer Options and turn on USB debugging. You can find directions on how to do this on older Android devices here.

Step 2: After launching the app, connect your smartphone to your computer via USB cable, and select Multimedia/Mobile Device from the main menu.

Step 3: On the next screen, select your device to scan files (again, if your phone doesn’t show up under a familiar name, look for similar capacity size as a clue) and then press Start.

Step 4: Once the scan is complete, you can preview and select which files you want to recover using the menu on the left side. After that, click the Recovery button and select where you would like the files to be stored.

Hopefully, one of these solutions will help you recover your photos. If not, you still have other options, like professional data-recovery services. Our videographer at Re/code recently used one and, while expensive, they were able to recover some important work files.

And if that doesn’t work, you have my full permission to have that aforementioned freak-out, before you start snapping new photos and gathering new memories.

Download Here